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There Are Mutant Flowers At The Site Of Fukushima Nuclear Plant

There Are Mutant Flowers At The Site Of Fukushima Nuclear Plant

There Are Mutant Flowers At The Site Of Fukushima Nuclear Plant
23 July 2015

We don’t have superheroes but The Happening might be, err, happening.

There are daisies taking a curious form at the site of the Fukushima nuclear disaster, four years after the 2011 tsunami.

Twitter user @San_kaido shared the picture writing:  "The right one grew up, split into two stems to have twp flowers connected each other, having four stems of flower tied belt-like. The left one has four stems grew up to be tied to each other and it had the ring-shaped flower. The atmospheric dose is 0.5 μSv/h at 1m above the ground."

But according to gardening experts, the abnormal growths aren’t as unusual as you’d think. It’s down to a hormone imbalance (best not tell the vegans that plants have feelings too) called fasciation or cresting. While it’s still rare, it means that parts of the plant increase in weight and volume.

So we won’t be seeing Hulk horticulture anytime soon but this is already better than M.Night Shyamalan’s idea of plants vs humans.

If we were to film our own version, here are five freaky plants we’d cast.

Australian Sundew

Just to be clear, this is a plant that pings it's prey from the leaves around the edge into a centre of sticky tentacles and then rolls it into a pit of doom for dinner. See it in action here.


Bloodwood Tree

The name gives most of this away. Hailing from Africa, this tree's sap is blood red. Just in case you didn't already feel guilty about the state of the environment.


Skeleton Flower

No one's quite sure why but this flower turns transparent when it's petals come into contact with water. We'd say those are some pretty super powers.


Chinese Bat Flower

Clearly a favourite of a certain Dark Knight, the bat flower takes gets its title thanks to a cunning resemblance to its namesake. It looks equally as weird when in full bloom


Devil's Fingers

It's a type of fungus that looks like a hand. Because walking through the woods at night isn't scary enough.