The Chernobyl Exclusion Zone (CEZ) remains one of the world's most
extraordinary locales for a number of reasons. Now, scientists want to
add another.
Some of the zone's abandoned structures have turned into an impromptu sanctuary for endangered
Przewalski's horses, the last wild equine species in the world.
Przewalski's
(pronounced psuh-vahl-skeez) horses are a small, stocky species. They
once roamed Europe, but are now mostly limited to Mongolia, China, and
Kazakhstan after successful reintroductions. Around 15 years ago,
however, scientists moved 36 horses to the CEZ, which crosses the
Ukrainian-Belarusian border.
Within four years, the population
almost doubled—impressive, but not enough to sustain an independent
population. But the scientists involved with the new population, led by
Peter Schlichting of Arizona State University, have recently discovered
the horses are taking advantage of their new surroundings.
"When the size of a population is reduced, it has lost a lot of natural variation," Schlichting says in a
press statement.
"The goal of conservation programs is to maintain as much diversity as
possible and prevent inbreeding, ensuring a population can withstand
changes in the environment and survive long term."
Motion-activated
cameras found that the horses are already using abandoned structures, particularly barns, as shelters.
"Our
results indicate Przewalski's horses routinely use abandoned structures
in the CEZ," says James Beasley, an associate professor at the
University of Georgia, in the statement. "As a result, these structures
can serve as important focal points for research and management to
obtain key demographic information such as age, sex ratio, population
size, and genetic structure."
The cameras tracked horse movement
through both winter and summer seasons, finding horses 35 times at nine
of 10 monitored structures during winter months and 149 times at all
eight monitored structures during the summer. The horses seemed to enjoy
their time in the structures, often spending more than five consecutive
hours in them.
But the horses weren't alone in the structures.
During the summer months, researchers found brown hare, red deer, moose,
wild boar, red fox, raccoon dogs, Eurasian lynx, and wolves alongside
them, as well as a number of birds and bats.
The CEZ's burgeoning
reputation as an animal shelter is perhaps the least-expected result of
the 1986 nuclear disaster that rocked the Soviet Union. Poor
construction and under-trained workers
inadvertently led to a catastrophe, which in turn forced over 116,000 people living near the Chernobyl
plant to evacuate permanently.
As
radiation levels in the CEZ lowered over the years and the political
fortunes of the Soviet Union crumbled, the newly independent Ukrainian
and Belarusian governments, as well as the rest of the world, began to
wonder what to do with the area full of everything but people.
Meanwhile, animals returned to the land. A
long-term study
from 2015 showed that "regardless of potential radiation effects on
individual animals, the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone supports an abundant
mammal community after nearly three decades of chronic radiation
exposures."
Further studies of the Przewalski's horses in the
region could show with certainty how far, or not, the population has
come since its introduction to the region. The study was done
exclusively on the Belarusian side of the border, known as the Polesie
State Radiation Ecological Reserve. The next step is to conduct more
research on the Ukrainian side of the border, where the horses were
first introduced.