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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Ecological mechanisms can modify radiation effects in a key forest mammal of Chernobyl

Anton LavrinienkoKati KivisaariEugene TukalenkoEugene TukalenkoEugene TukalenkoAnders Pape MøllerTapio MappesZbyszek BoratyńskiZbyszek BoratyńskiPhillip C. WattsPhillip C. WattsGennadi MilinevskyTimothy A. Mousseau

subject

0106 biological sciences[SDE.MCG]Environmental Sciences/Global Changesfood supplementationMyodes glareolusnuclear accidentBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesydinonnettomuudetIonizing radiationChernobylRadioactive contaminationForest ecologyEcosystemEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMyodes volekey specieschronic radiationEcologyReproductive successEcologyionisoiva säteily010604 marine biology & hydrobiologysäteily15. Life on landContaminationforest ecosystemTsernobylmetsäekosysteemitpopulation sensitivity13. Climate actionreproductive successta1181Mammalionizing radiationpopulation increase

description

International audience; Nuclear accidents underpin the need to quantify the ecological mechanisms which determine injury to ecosystems from chronic low-dose radiation. Here, we tested the hypothesis that ecological mechanisms interact with ionizing radiation to affect natural populations in unexpected ways. We used large-scale replicated experiments and food manipulations in wild populations of the rodent, Myodes glareolus, inhabiting the region near the site of the Chernobyl disaster of 1986. We show linear decreases in breeding success with increasing ambient radiation levels with no evidence of any threshold below which effects are not seen. Food supplementation of experimental populations resulted in increased abundances but only in locations where radioactive contamination was low (i.e., below % 1 lSv/h). In areas with higher contamination , food supplementation showed no detectable effects. These findings suggest that chronic low-dose-rate irradiation can decrease the stability of populations of key forest species, and these effects could potentially scale to broader community changes with concomitant consequences for the ecosystem functioning of forests impacted by nuclear accidents.

http://urn.fi/urn:nbn:fi-fe2019081223958