Lifeforms Can Clean Up Radiation … Naturally
Posted on July 5, 2011 by WashingtonsBlog 
When BP spilled huge quantities of oil into the Gulf, the company and the 
government ignored natural ways to help clean up the mess, and instead dumped 
toxic dispersants into the Gulf which actually made things worse.
Likewise – believe it or not – there may be natural ways to help 
clean up radiation from Fukushima and elsewhere, and to reduce human and animal 
exposure to radioactive elements.
Scientific American points out:
Like plants that grow toward the sun, dark fungi, 
blackened by the skin pigment melanin, gravitate toward radiation in 
contaminated soil. Scientists have observed the organisms—somewhere 
between plants and animals—blackening the land around the Chernobyl 
Nuclear Power Plant in Ukraine in the years since its 1986 meltdown. 
“Organisms that make melanin have a growth advantage in this soil,” says 
microbiologist Arturo Casadevall of the Albert Einstein College of 
Medicine in New York City. “In many commercial nuclear reactors, the 
radioactive water becomes contaminated with melanotic organisms. Nobody 
really knows what the hell they are doing there.”
>***
>“Melanin is very good at absorbing energy and then dissipating it as  quickly 
>as possible,” says Jennifer Riesz, a biophysicist at the  
University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia. “It does this by very  
efficiently changing the energy into heat.” 
>But Casadevall and his colleague Ekaterina Dadachova, a nuclear  
chemist at Einstein, speculate that the melanin in this case acts like a 
step-down electric transformer, weakening the energy until it is  
useable by the fungi. “The energy becomes … low [at] a certain point  
where it can already be used by a fungus as chemical energy,” Dadachova  
argues. “Protection doesn’t play a role here. It is real energy  
conversion.”
Cosmos Magazine notes:
Sitting at the centre of the [Chernobyl] exclusion zone, 
the damaged reactor unit is  encased in a steel and cement sarcophagus. 
It’s a deathly tomb that  plays host to about 200 tonnes of melted 
radioactive fuel, and is  swarming with radioactive dust.
>***
>But it’s also the abode of some very hardy  
fungi which researchers believe aren’t just tolerating the severe  
radiation, but actually harnessing its energy to thrive.
>“Our findings suggest that [the fungi] can capture the energy from  
radiation and transform it into other forms of energy that can be used  
for growth,” said microbiologist Arturo Casadevall from the Albert  
Einstein College of Medicine at Yeshiva University in New York, USA.
>***
>In 1999, a robot sent to map the inside of the reactor returned with  samples 
>of a particularly black fungi, indicating an abundance of the  
biological pigment melanin, which also colours your skin. 
>Though melanin is typically associated with ‘protective’ properties – 
>absorbing and safely transforming different electromagnetic  
wavelengths, such as DNA-damaging ultraviolet light – the researchers  
had an inkling that a more extraordinary phenomenon was allowing the  
fungi to prosper; something still involving the combination of melanin  
and radiation, but beyond the bounds of radioactive protection. 
>After all, even without melanin, many fungi are intrinsically 
>radiation-resistant.
>***
>The group analysed three different types of fungi, including  
Cladosporium sphaerospermum, the species abundant in and around  
Chernobyl. Using ionising radiation from the radioactive isotope,  
caesium-137, they exposed the fungi to radiation doses similar to those  inside 
the damaged reactor, and about 500 times greater than the 
Earth’s  normal background level. 
>Melanin-containing fungi exposed to the radiation – even when  
nutrient-starved on purpose – grew significantly larger and up to 2.5  
times faster than fungi without melanin and those not exposed to  
radiation. 
>According to Yeshiva’s Ekaterina Dadachova, the nuclear chemist who  
led the study, “the presence of melanin in the cells gives them a  
distinct advantage over non-melanised cells, in terms of better growth  
[with radiation].”
>***
>Because the fungi don’t actually ‘eat’ radioactive material, but 
simply  use the energy it radiates, Dadachova said, they’re in no danger of  
becoming radioactive themselves.
Indeed, some bacteria appear to have this property as well.  As the Washington 
Post notes:
At  least one of the bacteria species discovered [miles 
underground] lives  entirely disconnected from anything on the Earth’s 
surface or produced  by photosynthesis. It uses the radioactive decay of nearby 
rocks as the  energy source to break apart molecules that it 
then feeds on.
One of the world’s leading authorities on fungi and bioremediation – mycologist 
Paul Stamets  – writes:
Surprisingly, we learned from the Chernobyl disaster some species of 
melanin-producing fungi thrive, feeding on concrete, within 
the highly radioactive environment of the damaged containment vessel. At 
Chernobyl, some fungi’s growth was stimulated by severe radiation, even when 
exposed to >1,000,000 rads!
Stamets notes that melanin-producing fungi can take radiation out of the 
environment:
Many people have written me and asked more or less the 
same question: “What would you do to help heal the Japanese landscape 
around the failing nuclear reactors?”
>***
>Plant native deciduous and conifer trees, along with hyper-accumulating 
>mycorrhizal
>mushrooms, particularly Gomphidius glutinosus, Craterellus tubaeformis, and
>Laccaria
 amethystina … G. glutinosus has been reported to absorb – via the 
mycelium – and concentrate radioactive Cesium 137 more than 10,000-fold 
over ambient background levels. Many other mycorrhizal mushroom species 
also hyper-accumulate.
>***
>Continuously remove the mushrooms, which have now concentrated the
>radioactivity,
 particularly Cesium 137, to an incinerator. Burning the mushroom will 
result in radioactive ash. This ash can be further refined and the 
resulting
>concentrates vitrified (placed into glass) or stored using other 
>state-of-the-art
>storage technologies.
While Stamets focuses on the area surrounding Fukushima, there is no 
reason that we can’t plant melanin species like Gomphidius glutinosus, 
Craterellus tubaeformis, and
Laccaria amethystina which are common in
 areas with pine trees – for example, in many parts of  California, 
Oregon, Washington and Hawaii – to tie up radiation in our soil.   
Handle them like hazardous waste when you pick and dispose of them 
(contact your local hazardous waste agency for details).
Indeed, Scientific American notes that regular mushrooms or even 
plants could be converted into melanin-containing, radiation-loving 
lifeforms:
Fungi induced to produce a melanin shell (the human pathogen Cryptococcocus 
neoformans) grew well in such levels of radiation, unlike those sans pigment. 
>***
>Melanin could be genetically engineered into photosynthetic plants to boost 
>their productivity or melanin-bearing fungi could be used in  
clothing to shield workers from radiation …
>
>
>http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2011/07/lifeforms-can-clean-up-radiation-naturally.html
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:[email protected]?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to