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Uptake of Radionuclides by Bryophytes in the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone.

Brigitte SchmidtFelix KeglerGeorg SteinhauserIhor ChyzhevskyiSergiy DubchakCaroline IvesicMarianne Koller-PeroutkaAicha LaarouchiWolfram Adlassnig
Published in: Toxics (2023)
The "Chernobyl nuclear disaster" released huge amounts of radionuclides, which are still detectable in plants and sediments today. Bryophytes (mosses) are primitive land plants lacking roots and protective cuticles and therefore readily accumulate multiple contaminants, including metals and radionuclides. This study quantifies 137 Cs and 241 Am in moss samples from the cooling pond of the power plant, the surrounding woodland and the city of Prypiat. Activity concentrations of up to 297 Bq/g ( 137 Cs) and 0.43 Bq/g ( 241 Am) were found. 137 Cs contents were significantly higher at the cooling pond, where 241 Am was not detectable. Distance to the damaged reactor, amount of original fallout, presence of vascular tissue in the stem or taxonomy were of little importance. Mosses seem to absorb radionuclides rather indiscriminately, if available. More than 30 years after the disaster, 137 Cs was washed out from the very top layer of the soil, where it is no more accessible for rootless mosses but possibly for higher plants. On the other hand, 137 Cs still remains solved and accessible in the cooling pond. However, 241 Am remained adsorbed to the topsoil, thus accessible to terrestrial mosses, but precipitated in the sapropel of the cooling pond.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • risk assessment
  • polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
  • human health
  • health risk