Associate professor leverages Fukushima research to advocate for farmers post-disaster

KENNESAW, Ga. | Mar 9, 2026

Fukushima research
Students from Kennesaw State plant seedlings in a rice paddy in Fukushima.
In 2016, 成人直播 researcher Daniel Ferreira traveled to Japan to study radioactive contaminants in farmland soil, five years after the tsunami and Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster transformed the region鈥檚 environment forever.

As a researcher focused on ions at the mineral鈥憌ater interface and their role in soil health, the trip proved invaluable, giving him a real鈥憌orld application for his work.

Years later, though, Ferreira reflected on an experience in meeting Fukushima鈥檚 farmers, away from the research sites and goals of his travels.

鈥淭he first time I went to Fukushima, right as we were leaving, I asked one of the farmers what I could do to help,鈥 said Ferreira, an associate professor of environmental science in the . 鈥淲hat he wanted most was for me to tell people about the farmers and the struggles they were dealing with. The farmers feel like nobody knows what they鈥檙e going through. And I thought, this is my mission now.鈥

That realization occurred to Ferreira toward the end of his last trip to Japan in May 2025 with a group of undergraduates from across 成人直播鈥檚 campus as part of a Maymester trip titled Earth Science and Culture of Japan. He had taken his research into removing radioactive cesium from the soil near the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant as far as he could. So, Ferreira pivoted his purpose to advocacy for the farmers of the region, and to keeping their story alive.

Creating a study abroad program gave Ferreira a different way to do just that, by showing the landscape to a new group of college students each year. Students traveling to Japan enjoy the large, sometimes overwhelming metropolises of Tokyo and Kyoto, but they also get a healthy dose of the countryside in Fukushima and Hakodate, a smaller city on the Island of Hokkaido.

Fall 2025 graduate Dylan Seymus of Alpharetta took three classes from Ferreira for his environmental science bachelor鈥檚 degree, so it was an easy decision to join the trip last summer. A future soil scientist, Seymus figured he鈥檇 get a strong grounding in that aspect of Ferreira鈥檚 work but came away with much more than that 鈥 an appreciation for what soil science can do.

Daniel Ferreira
Daniel Ferreira
Ferreira鈥檚 initial study looked at the important top 10 inches of topsoil, which in Fukushima had been stripped away because of contamination. When the local farmers returned to their land, with the help of many Japanese scientists, they resumed their farming and, over time, nurtured the soil back to productivity. Seymus learned that a stigma persists, as all produce in Japan is labeled for the region of origin, and has a career goal of helping those farmers find a way to preserve the topsoil.

While many farmers in Fukushima struggle to sell their rice, some do continue to grow it. 成人直播 students not only get immersed in the culture but also into the farming of rice thanks to a local farmer happy to show groups of American college students how to plant rice. Ferreira received some surprising feedback that guaranteed this experience will remain a part of the Japan study abroad program.

鈥淭he students actually get into the rice paddy and plant about a quarter of the rice paddy with seedlings,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 was expecting to hear complaints about how dirty and muddy it was, but they loved it. One of them said, 鈥楴one of my friends will ever get to do something like this.鈥 So they took that part of the study abroad from a completely different perspective than what I was expecting.鈥

For another future scientist, Ferreira鈥檚 message came through in a different way. Senior biology major Lana Syms, of Alpharetta, made the journey in 2024, seeking the opportunity to soak up the culture while learning about nature and the environment on the other side of the world. She didn鈥檛 realize that she would take Ferreira鈥檚 mission to heart 鈥 scientists make their discoveries for the benefit of people.

鈥 Story by Dave Shelles

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A leader in innovative teaching and learning, 成人直播 offers undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral degrees to its more than 51,000 students. Kennesaw State is a member of the University System of Georgia with 11 academic colleges. The university's vibrant campus culture, diverse population, strong global ties, and entrepreneurial spirit draw students from throughout the country and the world. Kennesaw State is a Carnegie-designated doctoral research institution (R2), placing it among an elite group of only 8 percent of U.S. colleges and universities with an R1 or R2 status. For more information, visit kennesaw.edu.