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Showing posts with label japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label japan. Show all posts
Friday, October 12, 2012
Japan Earthquake Caused Long-Lasting Stress in Dogs
By Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience Senior Writer | LiveScience.com
Family dogs caught up in the Japan earthquake of 2011 and subsequent nuclear disaster at Fukushima showed signs of stress not inconsistent with PTSD long after the events, a new study finds.
The research compared abandoned dogs rescued from Fukushima with non-disaster affected dogs abandoned in 2009 and 2010, before the earthquake. The dogs that lived through the disaster had stress hormone levels five to 10 times higher than the dogs that were simply abandoned or found as strays.
"Long-term care and concern regarding the psychological impact of disasters appears necessary in humans and companion animals," the researchers wrote today (Oct. 11) in the journal Scientific Reports.
As part of a dog-rehabilitation program at Azabu University in Japan, researchers took in eight dogs from shelters in Kanagawa Prefecture and measured their levels of physical stress by monitoring the stress hormone cortisol in the dogs' urine. After the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, thousands of refugees were forced to abandon their dogs. Many of the animals lived a semi-feral existence in areas made uninhabitable for humans by the Fukushima nuclear plant meltdown that followed the disaster.
In May and November 2011, the Azabu University team took in 17 abandoned dogs collected at shelters and rescue centers in Fukushima. These dogs, like the Kanagawa canines, were rehabilitated and had their cortisol levels monitored daily. All dogs were later adopted by new owners.
When compared with the Kanagawa dogs, the Fukushima dogs were less aggressive toward unfamiliar people but also less attached to caregivers and more difficult to train. The disaster-affected dogs had five to 10 times the cortisol levels of dogs not touched by disaster, a gap that narrowed but did not close even after 10 weeks of loving care in the rehabilitation program.
The Fukushima dogs' handicaps in trainability echo learning problems in human trauma survivors with post-traumatic stress disorder, the researchers wrote. They suggested that similar brain chemicals could be at play in dogs and humans. Trauma-impaired humans can also struggle to bond with others, similar to the Fukushima dogs' lack of attachment to their caregivers.
The researchers warned that the samples were small and not entirely equivalent, with the Fukushima dogs being older, on average, than the Kanagawa dogs. Nevertheless, they found no evidence that age affected how dogs responded to abandonment, suggesting the disaster was the biggest driver of the dogs' stress.
"Humans affected by the disaster are already recovering and gradually returning to normal life," the researchers wrote. "However, our results suggest the possibility that stress can induce excessive, deep psychosomatic impacts with implicit behavioral manifestations, such as deficits in attachment and learning ability also in dogs."
Thursday, September 13, 2012
'Miracle' tree removed in tsunami-ravaged city
By Akiko Fujita | ABC News
The tsunami-ravaged city of Rikuzentakata, Japan, cut down the lone pine tree that survived the disaster 18 months ago and came to symbolize hope, but there are plans to keep the preserved tree on display.
Crews began the delicate process of cutting the 270-year-old tree into nine different sections Wednesday morning, removing large branches by crane as residents looked on.
Some 70,000 pine trees dotted Rikuzentakata's waterfront before the tsunami hit in March last year, but only one survived the destructive waves. Residents called the 89-foot tree a "miracle," but the saltwater that seeped into the roots proved to be too much.
Crews plan to hollow out the tree trunk now, and insert a carbon spine inside after treating the wood. They will replace the original branches with plastic replicas, before returning the pine to its original place next February, just shy of the second anniversary of the disaster.
"This tree has had such a big role," Mayor Futoshi Toba told reporters. "Reconstruction is just beginning, and the process is a long one. This is just a temporary move."
The entire process is estimated to cost 150 million yen ($27 million), a hefty price tag considering the larger reconstruction projects the city is already tasked with. A Facebook page was launched in July, to raise money for the preservation project, and city officials said they have collected more than $330,000 so far.
Nearly 20,000 people died when the tsunami hit the Tohoku region in northeast Japan 18 months ago. Hundreds of thousands of people remain displaced by the disaster
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