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Earth Science

Chernobyl Black Frogs Reveal Evolution In Action 63

German Orizaola and Pablo Burraco write via The Conversation: Our work in Chernobyl started in 2016. That year, close to the damaged nuclear reactor, we detected several Eastern tree frogs (Hyla orientalis) with an unusual black tint. The species normally has a bright green dorsal coloration, although occasional darker individuals can be found. Melanin is responsible for the dark color of many organisms. What is less known is that this class of pigments can also reduce the negative effects of ultraviolet radiation. And its protective role can extend to ionizing radiation too, as it has been shown with fungi. Melanin absorbs and dissipates part of the radiation energy. In addition, it can scavenge and neutralize ionized molecules inside the cell, such as reactive oxygen species. These actions make it less likely that individuals exposed to radiation will go on to suffer cell damage and increase their survival chances.

After detecting the first black frogs in 2016, we decided to study the role of melanin colouration in Chernobyl wildlife. Between 2017 and 2019 we examined in detail the colouration of Eastern tree frogs in different areas of northern Ukraine. During those three years we analysed the dorsal skin colouration of more than 200 male frogs captured in 12 different breeding ponds. These localities were distributed along a wide gradient of radioactive contamination. They included some of the most radioactive areas on the planet, but also four sites outside the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone and with background radiation levels used as controls. Our work reveals that Chernobyl tree frogs have a much darker colouration than frogs captured in control areas outside the zone. As we found out in 2016, some are pitch-black. This colouration is not related to the levels of radiation that frogs experience today and that we can measure in all individuals. The dark colouration is typical of frogs from within or near the most contaminated areas at the time of the accident.

The results of our study suggest that Chernobyl frogs could have undergone a process of rapid evolution in response to radiation. In this scenario, those frogs with darker colouration at the time of the accident, which normally represent a minority in their populations, would have been favoured by the protective action of melanin. The dark frogs would have survived the radiation better and reproduced more successfully. More than ten generations of frogs have passed since the accident and a classic, although very fast, process of natural selection may explain why these dark frogs are now the dominant type for the species within the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone.
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Chernobyl Black Frogs Reveal Evolution In Action

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  • Peppered Moth (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Retired Chemist ( 5039029 ) on Saturday October 01, 2022 @04:26PM (#62929691)
    This sounds very similar to the example of the Peppered Moth, which changed from a pale form to a dark one, when industrial pollution from coal changed the color of the tree trunks on which they rested. When the pollution was reduced, they reverted to the pale form. Evolution can operate very quickly in creatures with short generations, if the underlying variability is already present. What is more surprising to me is that melanin gave enough protection from radiation to drive the change. Melanin protects from sunlight, but I am surprised it would protect from higher intensity radiation from a nuclear disaster.
    • This sounds very similar to the example of the Peppered Moth,...

      This has some similarity, but some important differences. With the Peppered Moth the change in phenotype equilibrium was due to protection from existing predation driving the change. With the end of soot pollution the equilibrium shifted back and so did the more common light color form.

      With these black frogs the change is a change that appears to have provided direct protection from a new environment hazard, acutely dangerous radiation levels, at the time of the accident. This created a persistence or perma

      • Your distinctions are nonsense.
        I'll demonstrate.

        With these black frogs the change is a change that appears to have provided direct protection from a new environment hazard

        Becomes

        With these black moths the change is a change that appears to have provided direct protection from a new environment hazard

        That new environmental hazard is being eaten due to an inability to hide from predators.

        All changes that lose their benefit are doomed to one day fall out of your genotype. When the radiation is gone, these frogs will lose their melanin as well.
        How quickly that happens is a matter of generation length. With moths, it happens very, very quickly temporally speaking, because they have very short generation length.
        Frogs, less so.

  • by Kunedog ( 1033226 ) on Saturday October 01, 2022 @05:07PM (#62929755)

    Melanin is responsible for the dark color of many organisms. What is less known is that this class of pigments can also reduce the negative effects of ultraviolet radiation.

    IME those two facts go pretty much hand-in-hand whenever and wherever they are taught (along with a note about Vitamin D).

  • If the Russian soldiers putting themselves in the hospital from digging trenches didn't make people understand Chernobyl was still a nasty place this should.

    Remember how natural selection works, the frogs turned black because the radiation was so bad that even the 'not quite pitch black' frogs were dying/failing to reproduce at a rate fast enough to knock them out of the gene pool.

    • by nasch ( 598556 )

      If the Russian soldiers putting themselves in the hospital from digging trenches didn't make people understand Chernobyl was still a nasty place this should.

      This finding is about how nasty it used to be, not how nasty it still is today.

      "This colouration is not related to the levels of radiation that frogs experience today and that we can measure in all individuals. The dark colouration is typical of frogs from within or near the most contaminated areas at the time of the accident.

      The results of our study suggest that Chernobyl frogs could have undergone a process of rapid evolution in response to radiation. In this scenario, those frogs with darker colouration

      • If the Russian soldiers putting themselves in the hospital from digging trenches didn't make people understand Chernobyl was still a nasty place this should.

        This finding is about how nasty it used to be, not how nasty it still is today.

        "This colouration is not related to the levels of radiation that frogs experience today and that we can measure in all individuals. The dark colouration is typical of frogs from within or near the most contaminated areas at the time of the accident.

        The results of our study suggest that Chernobyl frogs could have undergone a process of rapid evolution in response to radiation. In this scenario, those frogs with darker colouration at the time of the accident, which normally represent a minority in their populations, would have been favoured by the protective action of melanin. The dark frogs would have survived the radiation better and reproduced more successfully."

        Or did you mean something else by "still"?

        An interesting point.

        I interpreted that to mean that the environment in the initially most contaminated areas was still most contaminated today.

        But it may be that active selection largely stopped years ago.

  • This recipe has been in my family since before the last glacial maximum:

    Invite the shaman over for dinner, so he can purge the cave of evil influences while you cook. In a large stone pot, grind two fossilized dinosaur jarbils to a fine powder. Add two fresh pterosaur eggs and two piglets of bacon. Season to taste. Heat until the stench drives all the children out of the cave to huddle in the blizzard so they won't have to smell it. Then remove two sticks from the fire and cook slowly until people start coming back into the cave. Pass the time by trading lies with the shaman, maybe chewing on some sun-dried worms to keep the hunger pangs away.

    Oh, and keep two stout spears and a heavy club within reach, because you're going to need them when dinner crawls out of the pot.

  • Starts with a radioactive spider bite, the next thing you know: Froggie - No Way Home!

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Saturday October 01, 2022 @07:10PM (#62929925)

    Does this mean that people with a very dark skin color (not even just black but darker shades like many India nationals have) have an inherently greater resistance to radiation generally, not just UV?

    I had never heard that before but the summary made it seem like this was widely known.

    I really wonder what degree of protection this affords, if it would make much difference at all for serious amounts of radiation.

    • by quenda ( 644621 )

      Does this mean that people with a very dark skin color have an inherently greater resistance to radiation generally, not just UV?

      Of course. External radiation, at least. But I'm not sure what use we can or should put this information to. Probably not nuclear cleanup crew recruitment.

  • â¦confusing evolution with natural selection.

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