$ r. Q/ G: N9 r2 BIn this Wednesday, Aug. 18, 2010 file photo forester Andreas Thiermeyer takes a sample of wild boar meat in Eglharting near Munich, southern Germany. While at the moment many Germans are worried about Sushi imported from Japan, some of the country's wild game and mushrooms pose a far greater radiation risk, showing the long-lasting effects of a nuclear catastrophe a quarter century after the Soviet Union's Chernobyl reactor spewed radiation across Europe.csuchen.de9 T! ?- z: l- r
. X/ H+ B9 \5 J' T$ H h3 Y3 E
$ Q) \+ ~1 O& T" tIn this May 2, 1986 file photo a car is checked on radioactive contamination at the East German border shortly after the Chernobyl disaster. Now in 2011 many Germans are worried about Sushi from Japan. But the real radiation risk may be some of the country's wild game and mushrooms, showing the long-lasting effects of a nuclear catastrophe a quarter century after the Soviet Union's Chernobyl reactor spewed radiation across Europe.