
How the wild dogs of Chernobyl survive — and what humans could learn from them
Fox News
Researchers observing wild dogs near Ukraine's Chernobyl disaster site hope to extrapolate survival possibilities for humans under similar conditions from the dogs' behavior.
They published the first of what they hope will be many genetics studies on Friday in the journal Science Advances, focusing on 302 free-roaming dogs living in an officially designated "exclusion zone" around the disaster site. They identified populations whose differing levels of radiation exposure may have made them genetically distinct from one another and other dogs worldwide.
"We've had this golden opportunity" to lay the groundwork for answering a crucial question: "How do you survive in a hostile environment like this for 15 generations?" said geneticist Elaine Ostrander of the National Human Genome Research Institute, one of the study’s many authors.

Marine injured in Abbey Gate bombing praises Trump for not forgetting families after US nabs suspect
Retired Marine Corps. Sgt. Tyler Vargas-Andrews, who was injured in the Abbey Gate bombing in 2021, said President Trump personally promised him "accountability."