Radiation from the Fukushima power plant acts as a corrosive acid that cuts, eats and deforms everything in its path. Now, scientists have discovered that radiation bleeding from the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear reactor may be responsible for “morphological defects” of fir trees in the surrounding area.
Morphological defects is a sugar-coated term for growth abnormalities. A team of researchers from Japan’s National Institute of Radiological Sciences investigated the morphological changes in Japanese fir trees in populations near the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear reactor.(1)