Friday, October 07, 2022

REWILDING CHERNOBY

The Mystery of Chernobyl’s Black Frogs

Germán Orizaola/Pablo Burraco via The Conversation

By Germán Orizaola and Pablo Burraco, 
The Conversation

The accident at reactor four of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in 1986 generated the largest release of radioactive material into the environment in human history. The impact of the acute exposure to high doses of radiation was severe for the environment and the human population. But more than three decades after the accident, Chernobyl has become one of the largest nature reserves in Europe. A diverse range of endangered species finds refuge there today, including bears, wolves, and lynxes.

Radiation can damage the genetic material of living organisms and generate undesirable mutations. However, one of the most interesting research topics in Chernobyl is trying to detect if some species are actually adapting to live with radiation. As with other pollutants, radiation could be a very strong selective factor, favoring organisms with mechanisms that increase their survival in areas contaminated with radioactive substances.


The accident at reactor four of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in 1986 generated the largest release of radioactive material into the environment in human history.

Keystone-France via Getty

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 coloration of Eastern tree frogs in different areas of northern Ukraine.

During those three years we analyzed 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.


Wild Przewalski's horses are among the animals who live in the shadow of Chernobyl now.

Genya Savilov/AFP via Getty

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 favored 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.

The study of the Chernobyl black frogs constitutes a first step to better understanding the protective role of melanin in environments affected by radioactive contamination. In addition, it opens the doors to promising applications in fields as diverse as nuclear waste management and space exploration.

We hope the current war in Ukraine will end soon and the international scientific community will be able to return to study, together with our Ukrainian colleagues, the fascinating evolutionary and rewilding processes of Chernobyl ecosystems.







ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Open Access

Ionizing radiation and melanism in Chornobyl tree frogs

First published: 29 August 2022
 

Abstract

Human actions are altering ecosystems worldwide. Among human-released pollutants, ionizing radiation arises as a rare but potentially devastating threat to natural systems. The Chornobyl accident (1986) represents the largest release of radioactive material to the environment. Our aim was to examine how exposure to radiation from the Chornobyl accident influences dorsal skin coloration of Eastern tree frog (Hyla orientalis) males sampled across a wide gradient of radioactive contamination in northern Ukraine. We assessed the relationship between skin frog coloration (which can act as a protective mechanism against ionizing radiation), radiation conditions and oxidative stress levels. Skin coloration was darker in localities closest to areas with high radiation levels at the time of the accident, whereas current radiation levels seemed not to influence skin coloration in Chornobyl tree frogs. Tree frogs living within the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone had a remarkably darker dorsal skin coloration than frogs from outside the Zone. The maintenance of dark skin coloration was not linked to physiological costs in terms of frog body condition or oxidative status, and we did not detect short-term changes in frog coloration. Dark coloration is known to protect against different sources of radiation by neutralizing free radicals and reducing DNA damage, and, particularly melanin pigmentation has been proposed as a buffering mechanism against ionizing radiation. Our results suggest that exposure to high levels of ionizing radiation, likely at the time of the accident, may have been selected for darker coloration in Chornobyl tree frogs. Further studies are needed to determine the underlying mechanisms and evolutionary consequences of the patterns found here.

1 INTRODUCTION

Habitat destruction, climate change and pollution are key factors damaging natural systems nowadays (Rands et al., 2010). Pollutants, in particular, are widespread in nature and represent one of the more powerful forces of ecological and evolutionary change (Palumbi, 2001; Spurgeon et al., 2020). Strong selective factors can induce fast adaptive responses, and signs of rapid adaptation to some pollutants have been observed across many taxa (Nacci et al., 2016; Pitelka, 1988; Reid et al., 2016), although these responses are far from generalized (e.g. Brady et al., 2017; Loria et al., 2019). Among the large diversity of pollutants introduced into the environment, radioactive contamination caused by human activities generates broad societal and scientific concern (e.g. Beresford & Copplestone, 2011). The release of radionuclides from nuclear power plants, as occurred after the accidents in Chornobyl (Ukraine) in 1986, and Fukushima (Japan) in 2011, represents the most evident case of public concern about the impact that ionizing radiation can have on living organisms.

The accident at the Chornobyl nuclear power plant on the 26 April 1986 caused the largest release of radioactive material to the environment in human history (UNSCEAR, 1988). Hence, the Chornobyl area constitutes a key scenario for evaluating the eco-evolutionary consequences of the exposure to ionizing radiation on wildlife. The exposure to extremely high levels of radiation after the Chornobyl accident caused rapid environmental damage (Beresford et al., 2016; Møller & Mousseau, 2006; Sazykina & Kryshev, 2006; Yablokov et al., 2009). Such acute exposure to radiation negatively affected the physiology, morphology and genomics of different species inhabiting the Chornobyl area (e.g. Kryshev et al., 2005; Møller & Mousseau, 200620152016; Yablokov et al., 2009). However, recent studies have reported the presence of large and diverse animal communities, a lack of negative effects of current levels of radiation in many taxa, and even signs of adaptation to radiation (e.g. Burraco, Bonzom, et al., 2021; Deryabina et al., 2015; Galván et al., 2014; Jernfors et al., 2018; Kovalchuk et al., 2004; Møller & Mousseau, 2016; Schlichting et al., 2019). Thus, more than three decades after the accident, there is still high scientific discrepancy about the long-term effects of the accident on wildlife (Beresford et al., 2020).

Ionizing radiation is harmful because it can damage DNA and other biomolecules, causing cell malfunctions and increasing mortality risk (Alizadeh et al., 2015; Lehnert, 2007; Mothersill & Seymour, 2014). Different mechanisms, such as DNA damage repair pathways have been proposed as candidates that may facilitate life in radio-contaminated environments. Organisms exposed to ionizing radiation can plastically upregulate the expression of these repair and protection mechanisms (e.g. Jernfors et al., 2018; Kesäniemi et al., 2019; Mustonen et al., 2018). However, these processes can be physiologically costly and unable to fully buffer the impact of radiation, which often results in deleterious mutations or lower individual performance. An alternative protection from ionizing radiation may come through changes in pigmentation. In animals, coloration plays a key role in several ecological functions such as sexual selection, defence from predators and health maintenance (Caro, 2005; Cuthill et al., 2017; Mackintosh, 2001). Previous studies have also revealed that melanin-based coloration can mitigate the impact of different forms of radiation, including ionizing radiation (Cordero & Casadevall, 2020; Dadachova et al., 20072008; Dadachova & Casadevall, 2008). However, whilst melanization has been showed to have a protective role against ionizing radiation in organisms with relatively simple level of organization, such as fungi, evidence suggests that costs of melanin-based colorations may be often higher than benefits in wild vertebrates (Galván et al., 20112014).

Amphibians occupy both the terrestrial and the aquatic environments during their life cycle and are, thus, exposed to a full range of radiation sources in contaminated environments. Furthermore, they often show low vagility and are highly philopatric to their natal ponds (Cayuela et al., 2020), which facilitates the estimation of their potential exposure to radiation and makes them ideal subjects for evaluating the effects of radioactive contamination on wild vertebrates. However, work on amphibians in radio-contaminated environments is still scarce (Orizaola, 2022). Recent studies have reported, for example, that radiation exposure was linked to an increase in mutation rates and mitochondrial DNA damage in frogs from radio-contaminated areas (Car et al., 2022; Gombeau et al., 2020), but a lack of effects of radiation exposure on physiological biomarkers in Chornobyl tree frogs (Burraco, Bonzom, et al., 2021). Here, we examined the differences in dorsal skin coloration of Eastern tree frogs (Hyla orientalis) living across a large gradient of radioactive contamination around Chornobyl, and whether the maintenance of skin coloration is physiologically costly in terms of oxidative stress.

Based on the putative protective role of melanin against radiation, we predicted that frogs living in (or near) areas with high radiation levels would present a darker skin coloration, which may suggest that radiation acted as a selective pressure on that trait. Since coloration is known to quickly change in some amphibians during the breeding season (Hettyey et al., 2009; Nilsson Sköld et al., 2013), we empirically examined the short-term lability of coloration through a small laboratory-based experiment. Finally, we explored the links between coloration, radiation and oxidative stress. Ionizing radiation is predicted to induce an oxidative stress state in cells (Einor et al., 2016; Galván et al., 2014), a process that may be buffered by the production of melanin or accentuated by the physiological costs of producing pigmentation. However, as eumelanin is the main pigment involved in the production of dark coloration in frogs, and a few studies support that its production seems not to be oxidatively costly (Frost-Mason & Mason, 1996; Galván et al., 2011; Prota, 1992), we predicted that darker frogs would not experience significant oxidative stress.

2 MATERIAL AND METHODS

2.1 Field sampling

We examined skin coloration on the Eastern tree frog (Hyla orientalis), a cryptic species of the European tree frog (Hyla arborea) group that inhabits from the Caspian to the Baltic Sea. Females start to breed at 2–3 years of age (Özdemir et al., 2012), which means that 10–15 generations have passed since the Chornobyl accident. The species usually presents a light green coloration (https://amphibiaweb.org/species/7317).

During three consecutive breeding seasons (2017–2019), we collected reproductive adult males of H. orientalis in ponds located in a 2.200 km2 area around Chornobyl (Northern Ukraine, Figure 1Supporting Information). We sampled frogs in twelve localities: eight within the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone and four outside Chornobyl in an area situated ca. 40 km to the East of the Exclusion Zone and currently exposed only to background radiation levels (Figure 1; Table S1). These two areas are separated by a system of flood plains, channels, and rivers (maximum crossing distance for a frog ca. 100 m) and moist soils (see USDA Foreign Agricultural Service https://ipad.fas.usda.gov/cropexplorer/imageview.aspx?regionid=umb; or Copernicus Soil Moisture Index: https://land.copernicus.eu/global/products/ssm). Both areas are located within the Polesia woodland ecological zone biome (Fileccia et al., 2014), and our previous studies have revealed no geographic barriers, and the existence of gene flow, between H. orientalis inhabiting localities within these two areas (Car et al., 2022). Field and laboratory work were designed to reduce differences in handling time, temperature or experimental procedures between localities and areas. All localities were medium-small wetlands with reed beds, within a matrix of forest and meadows, and located within the same soil type and color: soddy-podzolized sandy and clay-sandy soils (Soil Map of Ukraine, https://esdac.jrc.ec.europa.eu/content/title-russia-soil-map-ukraine). Water pH values, which may be associated with changes in coloration (Ancans et al., 2001), did not differ between localities within and outside the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone (average ± SE: 6.9 ± 0.17 for localities within Chornobyl, 7.2 ± 0.24 for localities outside Chornobyl; χ2 [1,12] = 1.66, p = 0.226). Temperature during the sampling days did not differ between localities situated within and outside the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone for both daily maximum and minimum values (average ± SE: 20.0 ± 1.0 and 9.3 °C ± 0.9, respectively, for localities within Chornobyl; 22.5 ± 1.6 and 12.2 ± 1.5 °C, respectively, for localities outside Chornobyl; χ2(1, 12) = 1.77, p = 0.210 and χ2(1, 12) = 2.60, p = 0.133 for maximum and minimum temperature, respectively).

Details are in the caption following the image
Map of the studied eastern tree frog (Hyla orientalis) locations (see also Table S1). The underlying 137Cs soil data (decay corrected to spring 2017–2019) is derived from the atlas of radioactive contamination of Ukraine (Intelligence Systems GEO, 2011).

In total, we examined 189 H. orientalis adult males, captured during active calling from 10 PM to 1 AM. Once captured, we placed frogs in plastic bags and transported them to the laboratory where we stored them individually in small plastic buckets with perforated lids, containing ca. 3 cm of water, and kept them in darkness during the rest of the night. On the next morning, we took a photograph of each individual for colorimetric evaluation (see below), we recorded morphological measurements (snout-to-vent length, body depth and width) using a calliper to the nearest 1 mm, and weighted each individual using a precision balance to the nearest 0.01 g. Morphometric measurements were used to estimate body condition index and individual dose rates (see below). All animals were collected, and experimental procedures were conducted, under permit of Ministry of Ecology and Natural Resources of Ukraine (No. 517, 21.04.2016).

2.2 Skin colour measurements

We quantified dorsal skin coloration of tree frogs following Troscianko and Stevens (2015). Individuals were placed on a black background and beside a ColorChecker passport (X-Rite, Inc). To provide a uniform light spectrum, we used two LED lamps (Northlight Isac 5 W, 300 lm, 3000 K), placing one at each side of the frog. We took dorsal images of individuals placed in this setting using a Fuji XT-1 digital camera with a Fujinon XF 35 mm F2 R WR lens, tripod-mounted and provided with a Fujifilm RR-100 remote release. We manually set lens aperture to f5.6, and ISO to 1250. All images were saved as. RAF, a file format containing fully uncompressed photography data. We linearized images with the help of a ColorChecker chart, and using the Multispectral Image Calibration and Analysis Toolbox for ImageJ software (Mica toolbox version 2.2.2) developed by Troscianko and Stevens (2015). Once completed the linearization process, we transformed images to greyscale and selected five squares of ca. 4 mm2 along the dorsal skin of frogs (two in the front part, two in the mid-lateral part, and one in the back of the body) avoiding areas where light was reflected directly back (i.e. specular reflectance). We quantified dorsal coloration as luminance using the function Pattern Color and Luminance Measurements included in the Mica toolbox ImageJ plug-in (Troscianko & Stevens, 2015). Luminance is an integrative trait that specifically describes the perceived lightness of an individual (see e.g. Carter et al., 2020). Luminance values were scaled to a range of 0–100% in reflectance, corresponding to the black and white luminance standards, respectively. For each individual, we calculated a single value for dorsal skin luminance, as the average luminance of the five selected areas.

2.3 Skin colour lability

Male frog coloration can change quickly in function of intrinsic and extrinsic factors such as the intensity of male calling activity or in response to some environmental conditions (e.g. Hettyey et al., 2009; Nilsson Sköld et al., 2013). To determine whether tree frog skin luminance can change over a short time period and how it may be affected by environmental background coloration, in May 2019, we collected 14 H. orientalis males from a single location within the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone (Azbuchyn, AZ, one of the localities with the highest variation in luminance; Figure 1) and kept them under contrasting experimental backgrounds. We transported the frogs to the laboratory and maintained them for 48 h into 1-L plastic buckets with the walls covered with either a white (n = 7) or black (n = 7) plastic film (except the lid that was transparent and perforated to allow light and air to pass through) to simulate extreme background conditions. Buckets contained ca. 3 cm of water in order to maintain moisture. We photographed each individual at the start and at the end (48-h later) of the experiment, and dorsal skin luminance was quantified as indicated above.

2.4 Oxidative stress

We determined the activity of three antioxidant enzymes (catalase, CAT; glutathione reductase, GR; and glutathione peroxidase, GPX) and lipid peroxidation (malondialdehyde concentration, MDA) in the liver of H. orientalis males inhabiting inside the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone. Antioxidant enzymes are present in different cellular compartments and have an essential role in transforming reactive oxygen substances produced during catabolism into more stable and non-toxic molecules (Halliwell & Gutteridge, 2015). MDA is the main product formed during the peroxidation of membrane polyunsaturated fatty acids and is considered a marker of oxidative damage in lipids (Del Rio et al., 2005).

To explore the relationship between the frog redox status, skin coloration and radiation, we quantified oxidative stress parameters in individuals collected within the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone in 2018. Due to logistical limitations, we did not quantify oxidative levels in individuals inhabiting outside the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone. For the relationship between oxidative stress and coloration, high luminance values (i.e. brighter frogs, the most common coloration of the species) were considered as a reference. For the relationship between oxidative stress and radiation, individuals with low absorbed dose rates were considered as the reference ones, following the approach used in previous radioecological research in Chornobyl (e.g. Mappes et al., 2019; Webster et al., 2016). Once morphometric measurements were recorded, we euthanized frogs by pithing without decapitation (AVMA, 2020). We collected the liver of each individual and stored them at −80°C until assayed. Livers were immersed in a buffered solution (Burraco et al., 2017) to avoid proteolysis in a proportion tissue:solution of 1:4.5, and homogenized at 35,000 rpm. The homogenates were centrifuged at 20,817 g for 30 min at 4°C, and the supernatants were used to estimate levels of the oxidative stress markers. As the activity of each antioxidant enzyme is relative to the amount of protein contained in the sample, we first determined total protein content according to Bradford's procedure (Bradford, 1976). We quantified catalase activity according to Cohen and Somersonm (1969). This method uses potassium permanganate (KMnO4) as an oxidizing agent and coloured component of the reducing agent H2O2. Five minutes after adding KMnO4, we quantified the reduction in this compound at a wavelength of 490 nm. We quantified glutathione peroxidase and glutathione reductase following Paglia and Valentine (1967) and Cribb et al. (1989), respectively, measuring in both cases NADPH oxidation at a wavelength of 340 nm. Finally, we quantified malondialdehyde (MDA) by measuring the red colour formed after the reaction of MDA with thiobarbituric acids, at a wavelength of 535 nm and according to Buege and Aust (1978).

2.5 Exposure to radiation

To estimate current exposure to radiation, we quantified total dose rates absorbed by each frog (in μGy/h). Briefly, we estimated total activity of 90Sr and 137Cs by integrating radionuclide measurements with body mass of each individual, considering the relative mass of bones (10%) and muscles (69%). We combined radionuclide activity concentrations in frogs, soil, and water with dose coefficients (in μGy/h per Bq per unit of mass). Dose coefficients for H. orientalis were calculated for internal and external exposure using a theoretical habitat use scenario for the species during the breeding season (Burraco, Car, et al., 2021) with the help of EDEN v3 IRSN software (Beaugelin-Seiller et al., 2006). For each frog, total individual dose rate was calculated by summing internal and external dose rates (see full details in Burraco, Car, et al., 2021). To estimate historical exposure to radiation in the studied localities, we calculated the distance from each place to the closest area with historical high radiation level, using as reference areas with 137Cs contamination levels above 3700 kBq/m2 in May 1986 (Cort et al., 2009).

2.6 Statistical analyses

All analyses were conducted in R version 3.6.1. We explored the relationship between historical and current radiation levels on dorsal skin luminance in tree frogs. We first measured the distance of sampling locations to the closest historical high radiation area (137Cs levels >3700 kBq/m2 in May 1986) using the maps of the Atlas of caesium deposition on Europe after the Chernobyl accident (Cort et al., 2009). As distance of sampling locations to the closest historical high radiation area and current individual dose rates were highly correlated (R2 = 0.86), we conducted a linear regression between luminance and distance to the closest historical high radiation area and individual dose rate, including body condition as a covariate and locality as a random factor. We also conducted a linear regression between luminance and individual dose rate in individuals inhabiting the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone. Finally, to examine possible differences between sampling areas (i.e. Chornobyl Exclusion Zone and Outside Chornobyl) on the dorsal skin luminance of tree frogs, we ran a linear mixed model including luminance as the dependent variable, sampling area as the independent variable, body condition as a covariate, and sampling location as a random factor. We added 0.1 unit to each value of distance to the closest historical high radiation area and individual dose rate value, to avoid 0 values that prevent log transformations. We estimated body condition as the residuals of the regression between snout-to-vent-length and body mass values (Green, 2001).

To check for the possible effect of time and experimental background conditions on short-term changes in dorsal skin coloration, we ran a linear mixed model including luminance as a dependent variable, the interaction between time (0 or 48 h) and background (black or white) as independent variables, body condition as a covariate, and individual as a random factor accounting for within-individual measurements. Finally, we conducted linear mixed regressions between dorsal skin luminance or total individual dose rate and each oxidative stress parameter (CAT, GR, GPX, and MDA, all log transformed), including body condition as a covariate, and sampling location as a random factor. Oxidative stress values were scaled to report comparable estimates in linear regressions. Data were plotted using the function ggplot included in the package ggplot2 (version 3.3.3).

3 RESULTS

Dorsal skin luminance varied substantially across sampling localities, ranging between 4.2 and 63.9 (4.2–45.6 and 22.4–63.9, within and outside the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone, respectively; Figure 2). In individuals inhabiting within and outside the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone, skin luminance was positively correlated with the distance to the closest area with historical high radiation level (χ2(189) = 7.77, p = 0.005; Figure 3a), but not to individual dose rate (χ2[189] = 2.24, p = 0.134). Radiation levels currently experienced by tree frogs living in the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone (i.e. total individual dose rates) were not associated with variation in dorsal skin luminance (χ2 [1147] = 0.30, p = 0.586; Figure 3b). There was no effect of male body condition (proxy for health and fitness in amphibians) on dorsal skin luminance (p = 0.26). Overall, Eastern tree frogs (Hyla orientalis) living within the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone had 43.6% lower dorsal skin luminance, on average, than frogs living outside Chornobyl (χ2 [189] = 27.18, p < 0.001; Figure 2a,b).

Details are in the caption following the image
(a) Dorsal skin luminance in eastern tree frog (Hyla orientalis) males inhabiting across a gradient of radiation inside (CEZ) or outside the Chornobyl exclusion zone (outside CEZ). (b) Range of dorsal skin luminance in H. orientalis males (from left to right: Luminance values of 5, 20, 30, 40 and 60).
Details are in the caption following the image
Correlation between dorsal skin luminance in eastern tree frog (Hyla orientalis) males and, (a) distance to the closest area with historical high radiation levels (137Cs levels >3700 kBq/m2 in May 1986), and (b) total individual dose rates of sampled individuals within the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone.

We did not find any correlation between skin luminance and oxidative stress markers (CAT: χ2(1, 75) = 0.32, p = 0.574; GR: χ2 (1, 77) = 1.06, p = 0.304; GPX: χ2 (1, 78) = 0.76, p = 0.382; MDA: χ2 (1, 81) = 0.59, p = 0.443), but we detected a negative correlation between individual dose rate and lipid peroxidation (i.e. MDA: χ2 (1, 81) = 12.36, p < 0.001; see Supporting Information). All other correlations between individual dose rates and oxidative stress markers were nonsignificant (all p < 0.278). Frog dorsal skin luminance was stable during the 48 h that lasted the experiment on colour lability (χ2 [1,14] = 0.51, p = 0.479) and was unaffected by background colour (χ2 [1,14] = 0.14, p = 0.705). We also did not find a significant interaction between time and experimental background (χ2 [1,14] = 2.96, p = 0.085).

4 DISCUSSION

Historical but not current radiation conditions seem to mediate differences in skin coloration in Chornobyl tree frogs. We detected a significant association between dark coloration and proximity to highly contaminated areas in May 1986 (i.e. areas with 137Cs levels >3700 kBq/m2; Cort et al., 2009). However, we did not detect a significant correlation between individual absorbed dose rates and pigmentation, suggesting that darker coloration is not induced by the current exposure to radiation. On average, tree frogs inhabiting the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone were remarkably darker than individuals from a closely located control area with background radiation levels. Additionally, we found no signs of oxidative costs linked to the maintenance of dark coloration in Chornobyl tree frogs, but lower lipid peroxidation in frogs with high dose rates. Finally, the observed differences in coloration do not seem to be due to short-term changes in skin coloration, or caused by adjustments to background color. These results suggest that exposure to high levels of ionizing radiation may have selected for dark skin coloration in Chornobyl tree frogs.

Dark melanin-based pigmentation is known to offer protection against different forms of radiation, including ionizing radiation (Cordero & Casadevall, 2020; Pacelli et al., 2017; Robertson et al., 2012). Exposure of fungi to high levels of ionizing radiation under laboratory conditions generates an increase in melanism and in the production of reactive oxygen species scavenging antioxidant enzymes, suggesting a key protective mechanism of melanin (Kothamasi et al., 2019). Likewise, exposure to ionizing radiation enhances the growth of some melanised fungi (Dadachova et al., 2007), which may even transform ionizing radiation into an energy source through the use of melanin pigments (Dadachova & Casadevall, 2008). Actually, melanised fungi can be found in areas with high natural (i.e. background) radiation such as those exposed to high cosmic radiation at the International Space Station (Dadachova & Casadevall, 2008), and they can even colonize highly radio-contaminated structures such as the interior of the damaged Chornobyl reactor (Wember & Zhdanova, 2001). Laboratory studies have revealed the putative protective role of melanin against ionizing radiation in vertebrates, although the number of these studies is still very limited and they have been conducted under acute radiation conditions, and thus far from the ones experienced by wildlife in radio-contaminated areas (e.g. Carotenuto et al., 2016; Kunwar et al., 2012).

Our study suggests that dark coloration in tree frogs is linked to historical but not to current radiation levels. This suggestion is based on a positive correlation between luminance and distance to the highest contaminated area at the moment of the accident, and on the lack of correlation between coloration and current dose rates absorbed by the examined frogs. Radiation levels have dropped several orders of magnitude since the accident and many short-lived radionuclides known to induce significant biological damage have completely disappeared from the area (e.g. 131I; Intelligence Systems GEO, 2011), which can contribute to explain the role of historical exposure and the lack of correlation between luminance and current individual dose rate in our study. Variability in coloration, including dark or grey individuals, is often described in tree frogs of the Hyla genus (Wassef et al., 2019). In our study, dark individuals were also detected (although in very low proportions) in localities outside the Chornobyl area (see Figure 2a). It is, thus, plausible that selective processes acting on existing colour variability favoured individuals with darker coloration, linked to higher survival rates in dark frogs under extremely high radiation conditions shortly after the accident. Indeed, pollution can generate strong selective pressures inducing high rates of evolutionary change (Sanderson et al., 2022). In this line, a review by Geras'kin et al. (2008) showed that the severity of the effects of radiation on the physiology or fitness of different species and on the ecosystem structure after the Chornobyl accident was strongly dependent on the dose received in the early period after the accident. This agrees with the idea that historical exposure to radiation may be behind some of the effects detected in the area across taxa, a topic that deserves further research (Beresford et al., 2020; Hancock et al., 2020). If selection acted on frog coloration, low dispersal and high philopatry to the natal environment characteristic of many amphibians (including the study species; Angelone, 2009), may have favoured the prevalence of dark coloration in the Chornobyl tree frog metapopulation (Car et al., 2022). In addition, amphibians with dark skin coloration often show dark coloration in their internal organs (Franco-Belussi et al., 20162017), and stressful conditions such as oxygen and food deprivation are known to induce higher cellular pigmentation (Franco-Belussi et al., 2017). Furthermore, although very few studies have examined the heritability of coloration in amphibians, work on different species has revealed that coloration has a genetic basis (Hoffman & Blouin, 2000; Stuckert et al., 2019), a knowledge that can foster the development of further studies investigating the evolutionary causes and consequences behind the observed divergence in coloration in Chornobyl frogs.

In vertebrates, dark coloration is mostly produced by two melanin-based pigments, black eumelanin and yellow–red pheomelanin. Melanin production is often costly and can generate oxidative stress (in addition to increases in corticosterone levels and metabolic rate; Chang et al., 2021; Polo-Cavia & Gomez-Mestre, 2017), which is also one of the main negative effects of the exposure to ionizing radiation (Galván et al., 2014). However, we found no sign of oxidative stress linked to dark coloration in Chornobyl tree frogs, but lower lipid peroxidation in frogs with high dose rates. The latter may be a consequence of compensatory responses, earlier in life, of the oxidative stress machinery against radiation (similar to observed in amphibian larvae in response to early-life detrimental conditions, e.g. Burraco et al., 2020). In amphibians, dark skin pigments are generated in melanophores, the skin chromatophores responsible for black, brown and darker green coloration (Duellman & Trueb, 1986). Although pheomelanin has been identified in the skin of some frogs (e.g. Wolnicka-Glubisz et al., 2012), eumelanin seems to be the almost exclusive dark pigment in amphibians (Frost-Mason & Mason, 1996; Prota, 1992). Eumelanin protects organisms against DNA damage (Galván et al., 2014), and its production may incur in lower costs than pheomelanin, since this pigment is produced without the need of cysteine and GSH (glutathione), a crucial intracellular antioxidant (García-Borrón & Olivares Sánchez, 2011; Ito et al., 2011). Studies in wild vertebrates exposed to ionizing radiation have reported a strong demographic decline linked to radiation in bird species with pheomelanin-based coloration, probably due to high consumption of GSH during pheomelanogenesis (e.g. Galván et al., 2011). By contrast, eumelanin levels in feathers were associated with lower oxidative stress and lower DNA damage in birds breeding in the Chornobyl area (Galván et al., 2014). Since oxidative damage is generally high in radio-contaminated environments (Bonisoli-Alquati et al., 2010; Einor et al., 2016), the production of eumelanin pigmentation may allow Chornobyl frogs to get protection without incurring in oxidative costs linked to the synthesis of pheomelanin.

Our study design aimed to minimize the effects of other factors potentially affecting coloration, such as environmental characteristics (e.g. habitat and soil type, water pH), capture time, or field and laboratory temperature, and although habitat changes have been substantial in the area, frog breeding habitats have remained much more stable (Santos, 2018). At the species/individual level, melanin-based coloration can have pleiotropic effects on other traits (San-Jose & Roulin, 2018). However, in our study, dorsal coloration did not correlate with body condition, a proxy for overall individual performance. Another putative confounding process may be a link between coloration and mating success (observed in some amphibian species, e.g. Rudh et al., 2011), although that seems not to be the case in tree frogs (Gomez et al., 2009). In our laboratory-based experiment, skin coloration seemed to be stable over a short time period (48 h). In addition, skin coloration was not significantly affected by background coloration, and (even if not significant) those changes were much smaller than the observed differences in skin coloration between frogs inhabiting within and outside the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone. Despite we discarded the possible influence of several confounding factors on the observed coloration pattern, we acknowledge the limitations of our field approach regarding the lack of field-based experiments and the small sample size used in the experiment testing for lability in coloration. Also, the absence (to the best of our knowledge) of tree frog samples collected in the Chernobyl area before or immediately after the accident, prevents us from comparing current and past skin coloration. Research addressing genome-wide signatures of selection may also contribute to improving our understanding on the mechanism behind dark coloration in Chornobyl tree frogs.

5 CONCLUSIONS

Our results suggest that the protective role of melanin previously detected in Chornobyl in smaller living organisms such as fungi may extend to wild vertebrates exposed to ionizing radiation. Historical high radiation and lack of production costs of eumelanin-based pigmentation may have facilitated the selection and maintenance of dark coloration in Chornobyl tree frogs. Further studies are needed to disentangle the causes and consequences of darker pigmentation in radio-contaminated environments, which will help to develop a better understanding of the eco-evolutionary effects of the long-term exposure to ionizing radiation on wildlife.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

S. Gashchack, Y. Gulyaichenko, J.-M. Bonzom and C. Car help us in the field or with radiation analyses, and the administrative personal of the Chornobyl Center for Nuclear Safety, Radioactive Waste and Radioecology (Ukraine) offered administrative assistance. C. Bradshaw and K. Stark helped us on initial stages of the project. F. Miranda helps us with oxidative stress analyses at the Ecophysiology laboratory (LEF) of the Doñana Biological Station. I. Gómez-Mestre and N. Metcalfe gave us great insights into early versions of the manuscript. W. Jones advised us with English language.

    FUNDING INFORMATION

    This work was supported by the Swedish Radiation Protection Agency-SSM (SSM2018-2038), by Carl Tryggers Foundation (CT 16:344) and by the Spanish Society of Terrestrial Ecology (AEET). The Carl Tryggers Foundation, Marie Sklodowska-Curie project METAGE-797879, and Juan de la Cierva Incorporación (IJC2020-044680) supported PB, and the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (Ramón y Cajal program, RYC-2016-20,656) supported GO.




    Sacred Easter Island statues suffer 'irreparable damage' after volcano fire
    Statues of heads known as 'Moais' stand at Rano Raraku,
     the quarry on Easter Island or Rapa Nui, Chile, on August 2012.
     (Karen Schwartz / AP)

    Mia Alberti and Kathleen Magramo
    CNN
    Published Oct. 7, 2022 

    Easter Island's towering stone heads and other archaeological elements have been charred by a fire, according to local Indigenous and Chilean authorities.

    The fire -- caused by the nearby Rano Raraku volcano -- started Monday and razed more than 100 hectares of the island, damaging its famous stone-carved statues known as 'Moai' which were created by a Polynesian tribe over 500 years ago, native officials reported.

    Ariki Tepano, who serves as the director of the indigenous Ma'u Henua community which manages the Rapa Nui Natural Park, described the damage as "irreparable" and warned that the "consequences go beyond what the eyes can see," in a statement Thursday.

    The Rapa Nui National Park -- whose name comes from the Indigenous moniker for the island -- is a protected area displaying the legacy of the Rapa Nui culture.

    The UNESCO World Heritage-listed island lies some 3,500 km (2,174 miles) off the coast of Chile and is the most remote inhabited island on the planet. The far off island has long been a bucket list destination for travelers from around the world, primarily due to the giant Moai monuments.

    Chile's Undersecretary of Cultural Heritage Carolina Pérez Dattari said that officials from the country's National Monuments Council (CNM) "are on the ground assessing the damages" from the fire on the island's sacred stone figures.

    The composition of the statues can be adversely impacted from "exposure to high temperatures ... which could create big fractures that affect the Moai's integrity," according to the CNM.

    The island's national park -- which features 386 Moai carved from solid basalt -- is currently closed off to tourists while conservationists investigate the extent of the losses, the Rapa Nui council confirmed in a Facebook post.

    Not long before the coronavirus pandemic put a pause on travel, Easter Island was grappling with a series of bad behaviour from tourists, who would sometimes take photos with the Maoi in angles where it looked like they were "picking the noses" of the giant statues.

    Two years ago, a Chilean island resident was arrested after his truck crashed into one of the stone figures and smashed the ahu, or platform, it was perched on.

    Polynesian seafarers first arrived on Rapa Nui approximately 900 years ago, and have long made researchers curious why the huge statues were placed where they are.

    But recent studies suggest the statues could be connected to where the island settlers found undersea freshwater springs.

    According to UNESCO, the Polynesian society settled on the island and established a "powerful, imaginative and original tradition of monumental sculpture and architecture, free from any external influence," such as the "erected enormous stone figures known as Moai, which created an unrivaled landscape that continues to fascinate people throughout the world."

    PHOTOS











    Death of NZFC’s third chief executive

    Wellington.Scoop
    Judith McCann, a former chief executive of the New Zealand Film Commission and Film New Zealand, has died suddenly in Ottawa. Her five years leading the Film Commission resulted in two of the country’s most successful films.

    Judith McCann became the NZFC’s third executive director in January 1989, succeeding Jim Booth who had moved out to produce films with Peter Jackson.

    She faced a production slump, because the Film Commission was insisting that every local feature film should have partial investment from private sources. But the private sources had dried up, and the consequent drop in production had created a crisis of confidence in the new film industry.

    Judith McCann persuaded the Commission to change its policies. Instead of holding out for private investment, it agreed to invest 100 per cent of the cost of five new feature films.

    One of the five new films was Jane Campion’s An Angel At My Table, produced by Bridget Ikin and based on the acclaimed autobiographical novels by Janet Frame. The film became a major international success. It won the special jury prize and seven other awards at the 1990 Venice Film Festival. It won the critics’ award at the Toronto Film Festival and became ‘best foreign film of the year’ in the United States and Australia. It was the first New Zealand film selected for the New York Film Festival.

    Other directors whose emerging careers were supported by Judith McCann during her tenure at the NZFC included Gaylene Preston, Peter Jackson, Alison Maclean, Garth Maxwell and David Blyth.

    In 1991, producer Robin Scholes and director Lee Tamahori were developing Once Were Warriors, with a script by Alan Duff based on his best-selling book. But the Commission did not like his first draft and Judith McCann, with head of development Ruth Jeffery, encouraged the filmmakers to choose another writer. This was Riwia Brown, who restructured the script and strengthened the role of the wife, who was to be played by Rena Owen. The film became a top seller in the market at the Cannes Film Festival in 1994, and was the top-grossing film in its New Zealand release, with an audience of more than a million people, outgrossing Jurassic Park and The Lion King.

    At the Montreal Film Festival, the feature won best film, and best actress for Rena Owen. At the Venice Film Festival, it won the best first feature award. It was released in more than 60 countries – the biggest ever exposure for a New Zealand at that time.

    Judith McCann left the NZFC after five years, a period when she had successfully revived the struggling local production industry and had overseen investment in more than thirty local features including two of New Zealand’s most successful films – three, if you include Heavenly Creatures which also received Film Commission support during her term.

    She then became chief executive officer of the South Australian Film Corporation, where she came to be admired for rejuvenating the state’s film industry.

    After a period running a film consultancy in Canada, she returned to Wellington in 2005 to head the newly formed Film New Zealand, an industry-led organisation which aimed to encourage offshore productions. She held this position till 2009, when she moved back to Canada to be closer to her family. She lived in Ottawa and ran a film consultancy business.

    Judith McCann was born in Christchurch, and lived with her family in Ngaruawahia and Tauranga until her parents moved to Canada, where she graduated in history from the University of Saskatchewan. She became the Canadian government’s chief of film policy and certification before joining the Canadian Film Development Corporation (later renamed Telefilm Canada) and becoming its deputy director. She came to New Zealand in 1987 to negotiate a government to government co-production agreement between Canada and New Zealand. It was the first time she had been back in New Zealand since she was a schoolgirl.

    In Canada, she had learnt French as part of the government’s policy of bi-lingualism. Given this experience, she ensured that te reo Maori was one of the languages in the agreement. In her new role at the Film Commission, she began weekly lessons in te reo, and under her leadership the Commission appointed its first kaumatua and kuia to provide advice from a Maori perspective.

    Human rights campaigners of Belarus, Russia and Ukraine win Nobel Peace Prize


    Illustration representing Nobel Peace Prize winners Ales Byalyatski,
    Russian organisation Memorial and Ukrainian group Center for Civil Liberties.
    @nobelprize


    Reuters Published October 7, 2022

    Jailed Belarusian activist Ales Byalyatski, Russian organisation Memorial and Ukrainian group Center for Civil Liberties won the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize on Friday, highlighting the significance of civil society for peace and democracy.

    The prize will be seen by many as a condemnation of Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is celebrating his 70th birthday on Friday, and Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko, making it one of the most politically contentious in decades.



    The award, the first since Russia’s Feb 24 invasion of Ukraine, has echoes of the Cold War era, when prominent Soviet dissidents such as Andrei Sakharov and Alexander Solzhenitsyn won Nobels for peace or literature.

    “The Norwegian Nobel Committee wishes to honour three outstanding champions of human rights, democracy and peaceful co-existence in the neighbour countries Belarus, Russia and Ukraine,” said Committee Chair Berit Reiss-Andersen.

    She called on Belarus to release Byalyatski from prison and said the prize was not against Putin.

    “We always give the prize for something and to something and not against someone,” she told reporters.

    Belarusian security police in July last year raided offices and homes of lawyers and human rights activists, detaining Byalyatski and others in a new crackdown on opponents of Lukashenko.

    Authorities had moved to shut down non-state media outlets and human right groups after mass protests the previous August against a presidential election the opposition said was rigged.

    “The (Nobel) Committee is sending a message that political freedoms, human rights and active civil society are part of peace,” Dan Smith, head of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, told Reuters.

    The prize will boost morale for Byalyatski and strengthen the hand of the Center for Civil Liberties, an independent Ukrainian human rights organisation, which is also focused on fighting corruption, he said.

    “Although Memorial has been closed in Russia, it lives on as an idea that it’s right to criticize power and that facts and history matter,” Smith added.
    Reactions

    Memorial said on Friday that winning the award was recognition of its human rights work and of colleagues who continue to suffer “unspeakable attacks and reprisals” in Russia.

    Ukraine’s Center for Civil Liberties said on Friday it was proud to win.

    “Morning with good news. We are proud,” it wrote on Twitter.



    The award was also recognition for the whole Belarusian people in standing up to Lukashenko, opposition spokesman Franak Viacorka said.

    He told Reuters that Byalyatski was jailed in “inhumane” conditions and he hoped the prize would lead to his release.

    “That’s a huge sign of recognition for the Belarusian people, because the Belarusian people deserves it for their bravery in countering the tyranny of Lukashenko …. they deserve all the prizes in the world,” said Viacorka, chief of staff to exiled Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, who is a close friend of Byalyatski.

    The Nobel Peace Prize, worth 10 million Swedish crowns, or about $900,000, will be presented in Oslo on Dec. 10, the anniversary of the death of Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel, who founded the awards in his 1895 will.

    “The Peace Prize laureates represent civil society in their home countries. They have for many years promoted the right to criticise power and protect the fundamental rights of citizens,” the Norwegian Nobel Committee said in its citation.

    “They have made an outstanding effort to document war crimes, human right abuses and the abuse of power. Together they demonstrate the significance of civil society for peace and democracy.”

    Nobel Peace Prize Winners Shine Spotlight On ‘The Power Of Civil Society To Promote Peace’


    Saturday, 8 October 2022
    Press Release: UN News

    The human rights advocates from Russia, Ukraine and Belarus who have been awarded this year’s Nobel Peace Prize, represent “the oxygen of democracy” said the UN chief on Friday, in a message of congratulations to the three winners.

    The laureates are Ales Bialiatski, a jailed activist in Belarus, the civil society organisations Memorial, which was forced to close its doors by the Russian authorities last year, and the Ukraine-based Centre for Civil Liberties.

    “As the Nobel Committee cited, this year’s recognition shines a spotlight on the power of civil society to advance peace”, said Secretary-General António Guterres.
    'Catalysts for peace'

    “Civil society groups are the oxygen of democracy, and catalysts for peace, social progress and economic growth. They help keep governments accountable and carry the voices of the vulnerable into the halls of power.”

    Mr. Bialatski was imprisoned in July 2021, as a result of the mass protest movement against the disputed re-election of Belarussian leader Alexander Lukashenko. Memorial is reportedly one of the oldest human rights organisations in Russia, led by previous peace prize laureate, Andrei Sakharov. It unearthed the full scale of suffering experienced in the notorious Stalinist-era prison camps, known as the Gulag.

    Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on 24 February, Ukraine’s Centre for Civil Liberties has begun documenting human rights abuses committed by Russian forces and their allies, having previously worked on exposing rights abuses in Russian-occupied Crimea, according to news reports.

    The chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, Berit Reiss-Andresen, said during the awards announcement that the three civil society winners “have for many years promoted the right to criticize power and protect the fundamental rights of citizens.”

    Civic space shrinking

    In his statement, Mr. Guterres noted that civic space was “narrowing across the world.” More and more, rights defenders, women’s rights advocates, environmental activists, journalists and others in the rights field, “face arbitrary arrest, harsh prison sentences, smear campaigns, crippling fines and violent attacks.”

    “As we congratulate this year’s winners, let us pledge to defend the brave defenders of universal values of peace, hope and dignity for all”, the Secretary-General concluded.

    © Scoop Media


     Belarus opposition urges release of Nobel winner Ales Bialiatski

    Opponents of Minsk strongman Alexander Lukashenko say they hope the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to activist Ales Bialiatski might help precipitate his release from prison.

    Biliatski remains in prison without trial after protests two years ago

    A spokesman for the Belarusian opposition on Friday said he hoped the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to Belarusian human rights activist Ales Bialiatski could bring about his release.

    Bialiatski, who remains in jail without trial after protests in 2020 against the reelection of Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko, was the only individual honored with a Nobel Peace Prize also awarded to the Russian organization Memorial and Ukraine's Center for Civil Liberties.

    What did the opposition say?

    Opposition spokesman Franak Viacorka said the award was a recognition for all Belarusians who had stood up to Lukashenko and his authoritarian regime.

    "They deserve all the prizes in the world," said Viacorka, chief of staff to exiled Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya

    Viacorka went on to add that the prize should attract attention to the plight of all political prisoners, including Bialiatski.

    "He's kept in inhuman conditions and we hope it will help to release him and thousands of others from Lukashenko's and the KGB's cells," Viacorka said.

    Tsikhanouskaya herself, a friend of Bialiatski, told the AP news agency that she thought the prize could have an indirect influence on Bialiatski's fate.

    "Physically, you know, this prize will not influence their situation but I am sure it [will] influence the moods and intentions of other countries to help those people who are behind bars,'' she said.

    The Nobel Prize committee itself also called for Bialiatski's release.

    "He is still detained without trial. Despite tremendous personal hardship, Mr. Bialiatski has not yielded an inch in his fight for human rights and democracy in Belarus", the Nobel committee said.

    The head of the Norwegian Nobel Committee Berit Reiss-Andersen said she hoped Bialiatski would be able to receive the award himself at a ceremony in December in Norway.

    "We do hope... that he can come to Oslo and receive the honor bestowed upon him," she said.

    Who is Ales Bialiatski?

    Bialiatski was one among those who led the democracy movement in Belarus in the mid-1980s, but he has kept up his campaign for human rights and civil liberties in the country. 

    The now 60-year-old was imprisoned from 2011 to 2014 and arrested again after massive more recent demonstrations against Lukashenko's regime.

    Bialiatski was the founder of the non-governmental organization Human Rights Center Viasna and was the 2020  recipient of a Right Livelihood Award, sometimes referred to as the "Alternative Nobel."

    Other reactions to the winners

    European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen hailed the "courage" of Bialiatski and the two organizations that won the prize.

    "The Nobel Prize committee has recognized the outstanding courage of the women and men standing against autocracy. They show the true power of civil society in the fight for democracy," von der Leyen tweeted. 

    Memorial itself said on Friday said the award recognized the work of colleagues who continue to suffer "unspeakable attacks and reprisals" in Russia.

    "It encourages us in our resolve to support our Russian colleagues to continue their work at a new location, despite the forced dissolution of MEMORIAL International in Moscow," Memorial board member Anke Giesen told Reuters news agency.

    French President Emmanuel Macron hailed the laureates, saying that their prize "pays homage to unwavering defenders of human rights in Europe."

    Poland's Foreign Ministry also said it welcomed the recognition given to the winners.  

    "We welcome the recognition of their efforts in the fight for freedom and respect for human rights," the ministry said on Twitter on Friday.

    However, Ukrainian presidential advisor Mikhaylo Podolyak criticized the Nobel committee in a tweet, saying it has an "interesting understanding of word 'peace' if representatives of two countries that attacked a third one receive Nobel Prize together."

    "Neither Russian nor Belarusian organizations were able to organize resistance to the war," he added.

    But the 2015 Nobel Literature Prize winner Svetlana Alexievich told DW, "Today’s decision of the Nobel Committee shows the view of people in the West that Russians, Belarusians and Ukrainians have their own heroes."

    "I have already received calls from Ukraine. I understand the despair of Ukrainians who are shelled and whose friends die every day. They say they are not happy with this decision as an effort to reconcile all three nations," she said. "Probably they have their reasons to think so. But I can’t imagine at this point how individuals can do something if the whole society is not active."

    ab, rc/sms (dpa, AFP, AP Reuters)



    NOT MY PREMIER
    Danielle Smith wins UCP leadership race, to be next Alberta premier












    By Adam Toy Global News
    Updated October 6, 2022 9:44 pm
    Danielle Smith makes a comment during the United Conservative Party of Alberta leadership candidate's debate in Medicine Hat, Alta., Wednesday, July 27, 2022. 
    THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh


    Danielle Smith is the new premier-designate of Alberta and leader of the United Conservative Party.


    On Thursday evening, the party announced Smith garnered enough ranked-ballot votes to beat the six other candidates and become the new leader.

    It took until the sixth and final ballot for Smith to get a majority of the votes — 53.8 per cent — beating Travis Toews’ 46.2 per cent. Brian Jean was knocked out in the fifth ballot.

    Smith said it was “a new chapter in the Alberta story.”

    “It is time for Alberta to take its place as a senior partner to build a strong and unified Canada,” the newly-chosen UCP leader said. “No longer will Alberta ask for permission from Ottawa to be prosperous and free.”

    Shortly after the results were announced, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau congratulated Alberta’s premier-designate on social media.

    “Let’s work together to build a better future for Albertans – by delivering concrete results, making life more affordable, creating good jobs, and more,” Trudeau wrote, also thanking Premier Jason Kenney for his service to the province.


    In her victory speech, Smith thanked the other leadership candidates and Kenney.

    She invited MLAs and UCP members to govern with “strength and compassion” and to lead the party to an election victory in spring 2023.

    Smith said she will be sworn in on Tuesday in Edmonton. Smith is Alberta’s eighth premier in 16 years.

    HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
    UCP members vote for Alberta’s next premier

    UPDATE:
    Thursday evening, UCP officials announced 84,593 ballots had been cast. 

     Population statistics | Alberta.ca  

    Alberta added 40,253 residents in the second quarter of 2022. 

    As of July 1, 2022, Alberta's population was 4,543,111. 

     
    Following the first round of voting, Leela Aheer was knocked out of the running with just 1.6 per cent of the first ballot.

    Following the second round of voting, Rajan Sawhney was knocked out of the running with just 2.7 per cent of the second ballot.

    Following the third round of voting, Todd Loewen was knocked out of the running with just 7.8 per cent of the third ballot.

    Following the fourth round of voting, Rebecca Schulz was knocked out of the running with just 8.4 per cent of the fourth ballot.

    Following the fifth round of voting, Brian Jean was knocked out of the running with just 14.8 per cent of the fifth ballot.

    Following the last round of voting, Danielle Smith won the election with 54.8 per cent of the ballot. Travis Toews received 46.2 per cent.


    Smith’s campaign was best known for the Alberta sovereignty act, a proposed legislation that would allow the Alberta legislature to refuse enforcement of federal laws or policies that are seen as intrusions into provincial jurisdiction.

    Some experts have warned the act could cause a constitutional crisis. Four leadership hopefuls held a united news conference in early September calling the proposed legislation a “constitutional fairytale.” A co-author of the plan the proposed act came from said the unconstitutionality of the act “is exactly the point.”

    Smith has also spoken out against pandemic public health measures, like mask mandates and vaccinations. She has also talked about revamping the health system by using health spending accounts and firing the board of Alberta Health Services, which oversees the front-line delivery of care.

    Thursday evening in Calgary, she repeated her promise to “reform the dysfunction of Alberta Health Services and repair our broken EMS services,” adding she will replace AHS management who are unable to “immediately” follow her direction.

    Smith’s previous foray into politics was as Wildrose leader from 2009 until 2014. In December 2014, she resigned and crossed the floor with 10 other MLAs to join the Progressive Conservative Party.

    She later apologized for the move. Smith did not win the PC nomination for her then-riding of Highwood ahead of the 2015 election.

    SHE NEVER LEFT RIGHT WING POLITICS

    Prior to re-entering politics, Smith hosted a radio talk show on Corus Radio in Alberta. Corus Entertainment is the parent company of Global News. She announced her resignation in January 2021, citing declines in freedom of speech and wanting to get back to a balance of competing ideologies.
    ROFLMAO
    2:04 Alberta sovereignty boosting UCP leadership frontrunner’s campaign

    Smith intends to table Bill 1, the sovereignty act, but is not currently a member of the legislative assembly. On Monday, said she had a “number” of MLAs who offered to give up their seat in a byelection.

    One-term backbencher Roger Reid is the current MLA for Livingstone-Macleod, a riding that includes Smith’s current home of High River, Alta.

    Smith dismissed the the idea of running in Calgary-Elbow, a currently vacant seat after Doug Schweitzer announced his resignation earlier this year.

    She also said she would not seek a snap election, instead dropping the writ for an election in May 2023.

    After her win Thursday evening, Smith said she would meet with UCP MLAs on Friday.

    READ MORE: How Alberta’s UCP leadership race works

    Ballots went to nearly 124,000 UCP members at the beginning of September, with voting for the new leader continuing until Monday. In-person voting locations were also opened on Thursday in Slave Lake, Edmonton, Red Deer, Calgary and Taber, Alta.

    UCP president Cynthia Moore said 84,593 votes were cast for the new leader.

    Also in the running were former Jason Kenney cabinet ministers Travis Toews, Leela Aheer, Rajan Sawhney and Rebecca Schulz; backbencher Brian Jean; and former caucus member Todd Loewen.

    With the UCP the ruling party in the Alberta legislature, its leader is the premier.

    A “tribute” for outgoing UCP leader Kenney will take place at the UCP annual general meeting on the weekend of Oct. 21 on Enoch Cree Nation.


    Final in-person vote Thursday for UCP members to pick Alberta premier

    Recent polling from pollster Janet Brown showed none of the leadership candidates resonated strongly with Albertans.


    “I think this leadership race has had a negative impact on the UCP brand,” Brown said on Friday.

    “Job number one (for the new leader) will be to earn the trust of Albertans and prove to Albertans that they know what matters to them.”


    Mount Royal University political scientist Duane Bratt said the first thing the leader is likely to do is name a new cabinet.

    “We’re going to see a new government now. Typically there’s some minor shuffling, but in 2014, after Jim Prentice became premier, he also brought in two unelected cabinet ministers: Gordon Dirks and Stephen Mandel,” Bratt told Global News.

    “We’re not just electing a leader who becomes premier, we’re electing essentially a new UCP government.”

    –with files from The Canadian Press