Blue-furred dogs are prowling the Chernobyl disaster site – here’s why

Blue dogs are prowling Chernobyl
No matter what shade they are, these dogs are all very much good boys (Picture: Getty)

Dr Jennifer Betz knows exactly what it looks like – mutant, radioactive super-dogs that talk rather than bark.

Last month, Dr Betz’s team spotted three blue dogs in Chernobyl, the restricted area surrounding the epicentre of the 1989 nuclear disaster.

One member filmed the feral dogs as they loitered around the woodland near the Ukrainian ghost town Pripyat, 60 miles north of Kyiv.

‘We wanted to catch them to sterilise them,’ the veterinary medical director of the Dogs of Chernobyl campaign told Metro. ‘We went back every day to find them, but they never showed.’

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The programme is part of the Clean Futures Fund, a nonprofit supporting communities experiencing the long-term effects of nuclear disaster.

Dogs of Chernobyl went to the disaster site from October 5 to 13 to sterilise the dogs, many the descendants of abandoned animals.

‘The last day we were there, we were able to see them from far off in the distance,’ says Dr Betz, 55. ‘The blue colour had been dissipating.’

Almost immediately after the footage of the bright blue dogs was uploaded to the Dogs of Chernobyl TikTok, the clip went viral.

Viewers expressed almost equally immediate concern – were the dogs healthy? Was the footage nothing more than an AI-generated video?

Dr Betz, who lives in Portland, Oregon, however, isn’t worried in the slightest.

Story from Jam Press (Blue Dogs Chernobyl) Pictured: A video grab of several dogs living in Chernobyl that appear to have turned blue in colour. VIDEO: Dogs in Chernobyl are turning BLUE Footage has captured several dogs living in Chernobyl that appear to have turned blue in colour. 38 years on from the nuclear disaster, a team of charity workers discovered three dogs whose fur had turned a shocking shade of blue. The video, which garnered 330,000 views online, shows one animal which looks completely blue, next to other dogs which appear to have natural fur. Another dog, of a different breed, was also filmed with the same blue colouring. A third blue pup was also spotted in the area, with no explanation as to how its colouring has changed so dramatically. The footage was filmed this month by Dogs of Chernobyl, who are affiliated with the non-profit Clean Futures Fund, who work on the ground in the area to spay, neuter and vaccinate stray dogs that live in the zone. Each year, a different team come to the area to provide medical care and food for the estimated 700 dogs residing in Chernobyl. The team described the sightings of blue dogs as a ?very unique experience?, as reported by?NeedToKnow. A spokesperson said: ?We are on the ground now catching dogs for sterilisation, and we came across three dogs that were completely blue. ?We are not sure exactly what is going on. ?The town people are asking us why the dogs were blue, as they were not blue last week. ?We do not know the reason, and we are attempting to catch them so we can find out what is happening. ?Most likely, they?re getting into some sort of chemical. ?They seem to be very active and healthy, but at this point, we have not been able to catch them.? Clean Futures Fund started the Dogs of Chernobyl program in 2017 to help care for the descendants of pets abandoned back in the 80s following the nuclear disaster. ENDS EDITOR'S NOTE: Video Usage Licence: (PROFESSIONAL PARTNER) We have obtained this material from a professional partner for use by our news media clients (company press release / other media agency). Video Restrictions: None.
One animal was filmed looking completely blue, next to other dogs which appear to have natural fur (Picture: Jam Press/@dogsofchernobyl)
Story from Jam Press (Blue Dogs Chernobyl) Pictured: A video grab of several dogs living in Chernobyl that appear to have turned blue in colour. VIDEO: Dogs in Chernobyl are turning BLUE Footage has captured several dogs living in Chernobyl that appear to have turned blue in colour. 38 years on from the nuclear disaster, a team of charity workers discovered three dogs whose fur had turned a shocking shade of blue. The video, which garnered 330,000 views online, shows one animal which looks completely blue, next to other dogs which appear to have natural fur. Another dog, of a different breed, was also filmed with the same blue colouring. A third blue pup was also spotted in the area, with no explanation as to how its colouring has changed so dramatically. The footage was filmed this month by Dogs of Chernobyl, who are affiliated with the non-profit Clean Futures Fund, who work on the ground in the area to spay, neuter and vaccinate stray dogs that live in the zone. Each year, a different team come to the area to provide medical care and food for the estimated 700 dogs residing in Chernobyl. The team described the sightings of blue dogs as a ?very unique experience?, as reported by?NeedToKnow. A spokesperson said: ?We are on the ground now catching dogs for sterilisation, and we came across three dogs that were completely blue. ?We are not sure exactly what is going on. ?The town people are asking us why the dogs were blue, as they were not blue last week. ?We do not know the reason, and we are attempting to catch them so we can find out what is happening. ?Most likely, they?re getting into some sort of chemical. ?They seem to be very active and healthy, but at this point, we have not been able to catch them.? Clean Futures Fund started the Dogs of Chernobyl program in 2017 to help care for the descendants of pets abandoned back in the 80s following the nuclear disaster. ENDS EDITOR'S NOTE: Video Usage Licence: (PROFESSIONAL PARTNER) We have obtained this material from a professional partner for use by our news media clients (company press release / other media agency). Video Restrictions: None.
The footage was watched by hundreds of thousands online (Picture: Jam Press/@dogsofchernobyl)

‘Obviously, they’ve rolled in something,’ she says, suggesting it was a blue chemical fluid that had leaked out of a nearby broken portable toilet.

The liquid is a type of disinfectant called a quaternary ammonium compound, which is non-toxic to humans.

‘My dog gets into the burn pile, and her whole head is black when she comes out,’ adds Dr Betz. ‘So they roll on things, and they roll in nasty things.’

After the disaster at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, hundreds of families were forced to evacuate, leaving behind their homes – and pets.

While local officials spent years trying to exterminate them – wary of disease and radiation contamination – the pet dogs have thrived.

Around 500 stray dogs live around the disaster site, known as the exclusion zone, bonding with local clean-up crews and power plant workers who often feed them.

TOPSHOT - A photograph shows dogs passing by a Ferris wheel in background in the ghost town of Pripyat near the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant on May 29, 2022, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. - More than a 100 employees who had shown up just hours before for their night shift were now trapped as Russian forces crossed into Ukraine and seized swaths of land as they marched toward Kyiv.??The capture of the Chernobyl by Russian forces kicked off a weeks-long ordeal that saw power briefly cut at the facility and employees carefully monitored by the invaders as they grappled with fresh uncertainty during the invasion's early days. (Photo by Dimitar DILKOFF / AFP) (Photo by DIMITAR DILKOFF/AFP via Getty Images)
Packs of dogs also live in the ghost town of Pripyat near the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant (Picture: AFP/Getty Images)
A dog is seen next to a sign of radioactivity set in front of a crucifix in the ghost city of Prypyat near Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant on April 8, 2016. Ukraine is preparing to mark 30 years since the Chernobyl disaster, the world's worst nuclear accident whose death toll remains a mystery and which continues to jeopardise the local population's health. More than 200 tonnes of uranium remain inside the reactor that exploded three decades ago at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, raising fears there could be more radioactive leaks if the ageing concrete structure covering the stricken reactor collapses. / AFP / Sergei SUPINSKY (Photo credit should read SERGEI SUPINSKY/AFP via Getty Images)
Some scientists view the dogs as a real-life laboratory to understand the impact of long-term radiation exposure (Picture: AFP/Getty Images)

Nearly half of the dogs live in the immediate vicinity of the power plant, while the others live in Chernobyl City, a residential area nine miles away.

Dogs of Chernobyl, which relies on donations, has neutered some 1,000 dogs and cats since volunteers arrived at the site in 2017. Three Clean Futures Fund clinics also provide veterinary care and administer vaccines.

Some scientists see the zone as a lab to see the impact of chronic, low-level radiation on animals.

Research has shown that the dogs of Chernobyl are genetically distinct from purebred canines. How much the radioactive environment has contributed to their unique genes remains unclear, however.

This isn’t quite the four-headed, cancer-immune dogs that people expect to see. ‘There’s a fascination with Chernobyl and radiation,’ says Dr Betz, who has co-published several research papers on Chernobyl’s dogs.

Spider-Man turns after being bitten by a radioactive spider. People want to believe that kind of craziness.

CHORNOBYL, UKRAINE - AUGUST 18: Stray dogs hang out near an abandoned, partially-completed cooling tower at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on August 18, 2017 near Chornobyl, Ukraine. An estimated 900 stray dogs live in the exclusion zone, many of them likely the descendants of dogs left behind following the mass evacuation of residents in the aftermath of the 1986 nuclear disaster at Chernobyl. Volunteers, including veterinarians and radiation experts from around the world, are participating in an initiative called The Dogs of Chernobyl, launched by the non-profit Clean Futures Fund. Participants capture the dogs, study their radiation exposure, vaccinate them against parasites and diseases including rabies, tag the dogs and release them again into the exclusion zone. Some dogs are also being outfitted with special collars equipped with radiation sensors and GPS receivers in order to map radiation levels across the zone. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)
The dogs of Chernobyl do not have four heads, Dr Betz says (Picture: Getty Images Europe)
Story from Jam Press (Blue Dogs Chernobyl) Pictured: A video grab of several dogs living in Chernobyl that appear to have turned blue in colour. VIDEO: Dogs in Chernobyl are turning BLUE Footage has captured several dogs living in Chernobyl that appear to have turned blue in colour. 38 years on from the nuclear disaster, a team of charity workers discovered three dogs whose fur had turned a shocking shade of blue. The video, which garnered 330,000 views online, shows one animal which looks completely blue, next to other dogs which appear to have natural fur. Another dog, of a different breed, was also filmed with the same blue colouring. A third blue pup was also spotted in the area, with no explanation as to how its colouring has changed so dramatically. The footage was filmed this month by Dogs of Chernobyl, who are affiliated with the non-profit Clean Futures Fund, who work on the ground in the area to spay, neuter and vaccinate stray dogs that live in the zone. Each year, a different team come to the area to provide medical care and food for the estimated 700 dogs residing in Chernobyl. The team described the sightings of blue dogs as a ?very unique experience?, as reported by?NeedToKnow. A spokesperson said: ?We are on the ground now catching dogs for sterilisation, and we came across three dogs that were completely blue. ?We are not sure exactly what is going on. ?The town people are asking us why the dogs were blue, as they were not blue last week. ?We do not know the reason, and we are attempting to catch them so we can find out what is happening. ?Most likely, they?re getting into some sort of chemical. ?They seem to be very active and healthy, but at this point, we have not been able to catch them.? Clean Futures Fund started the Dogs of Chernobyl program in 2017 to help care for the descendants of pets abandoned back in the 80s following the nuclear disaster. ENDS EDITOR'S NOTE: Video Usage Licence: (PROFESSIONAL PARTNER) We have obtained this material from a professional partner for use by our news media clients (company press release / other media agency). Video Restrictions: None.
The virality of the footage, Dr Betz says, was because of the world’s ‘fascination’ with Chernobyl (Picture: Jam Press/@dogsofchernobyl)

‘So, the fact that they saw a blue dog, they immediately assume that instead of the obvious. Could have been a yellow dog, but blue, for some reason, people see and think radiation.’

Many of the dogs in Chernobyl struggle with birth defects, such as hip dysplasia, which means hip joints are misaligned and unstable.

The reason isn’t radiation, Dr Betz stresses, but inbreeding. Security barriers around the power plant may keep the power plant dogs and the Chernobyl City dogs apart, for one.

‘These are an isolated group of dogs that have been breeding mother to father, daughter to father, for 40 years,’ she adds.

It’s not only dogs that roam Chernobyl – wolves, boars, birds, deer, lynx and the once nearly extinct Przewalski’s horse have been spotted.

@dogsofchernobyl

Every once in a while, we spot some Przewalski’s Horses in the Chornobyl zone. This particular day we got extremely close and were able to admire their beauty. #przewalski#dogs#horse#amazing#beauty

♬ original sound – DogsofChernobyl

Chronic radiation has affected some critters – wolves are more resilient to cancer, birds in the area have smaller brains and frogs have darker skin to protect against radiation.

Given the short life spans of many of these creatures, dogs included, further investigation of radiation-related changes is needed.

As World War Three fears grow, such data would be just as useful for humans as it would be for animals, too, says Dr Betz.

‘What is it going to mean for people in the future should we have another accident like Chernobyl?’ she adds.

‘With what’s happening in the world right now, we can learn from these animals by what we find.’

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

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