There are apparently a number of studies out on this topic as well as a number pointing out the apparent dangers of cell phone usage. I would love to say that it is all hooey, but I am not seeing believable counter evidence either. I am seeing evasion instead.
Whatever human dangers might exist, they will now become apparent in disease statistics from the past decade.
Whatever plant damage is occurring, it is going to take clever experimental design to isolates the cause and effect to provide a convincing argument.
It is real easy to blame individual situations on a cause of choice. A lead colored tinge sounds like a newly emergent fungal agent, rather than a radio wave based effect. My point is that we are all going to remain unconvinced unless we see a measurable sharp rise in human pathologies that may be plausibly linked to this particular cause.
We have been at it a decade at least and I see at best evidence below threshold.
Radiation from Wi-Fi networks is harmful to trees, causing significant variations in growth, as well as bleeding and fissures in the bark, according to a recent study in the Netherlands .
René Schoemaker
19.11.2010 kl 01:25 | Webwereld
Radiation from Wi-Fi networks is harmful to trees, causing significant variations in growth, as well as bleeding and fissures in the bark, according to a recent study in the Netherlands .
All deciduous trees in the Western world are affected, according to the study by a group of institutions, including the TU Delft University and Wageningen University . The city of Alphen aan den Rijn ordered the study five years ago after officials found unexplained abnormalities on trees that couldn't be ascribed to a virus or bacterial infection.
Additional testing found the disease to occur throughout the Western world. In the Netherlands , about 70 percent of all trees in urban areas show the same symptoms, compared with only 10 percent five years ago. Trees in densely forested areas are hardly affected.
Besides the electromagnetic fields created by mobile-phone networks and wireless LANs, ultrafine particles emitted by cars and trucks may also be to blame. These particles are so small they are able to enter the organisms.
The study exposed 20 ash trees to various radiation sources for a period of three months. Trees placed closest to the Wi-Fi radio demonstrated a "lead-like shine" on their leaves that was caused by the dying of the upper and lower epidermis of the leaves. This would eventually result in the death of parts of the leaves. The study also found that Wi-Fi radiation could inhibit the growth of corn cobs.
The researchers urged that further studies were needed to confirm the current results and determine long-term effects of wireless radiation on trees.
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