Science of The Total Environment
Volume 502, 1 January 2015, Pages 611-616
Uptake and translocation of radiocesium in cedar leaves following the Fukushima nuclear accident
Highlights
- •137Cs was absorbed into cedar leaves from the leaf surface.
- •137Cs in new leaves of cedar trees was mainly supplied by translocation.
- •Over 80% of 137Cs in rainwater was present in the dissolved form.
Abstract
Cryptomeria japonica trees in the area surrounding Fukushima, Japan, intercepted 137Cs present in atmospheric deposits soon after the Fukushima nuclear accident in March 2011. To study the uptake and translocation of 137Cs in C. japonica leaves, we analyzed activity concentrations of 137Cs and the concentration ratios of 137Cs to 133Cs (137Cs/133Cs) in old and new leaves of C. japonica collected from a forest on Mount Tsukuba between 9 and 15 months after the accident. Both isotopes were also analyzed in throughfall, bulk precipitation and soil extracts. Water of atmospheric and soil origin were used as proxies for deciphering the absorption from leaf surfaces and root systems, respectively. Results indicate that 20–40% of foliar 137Cs existed inside the leaf, while 60–80% adhered to the leaf surface. The 137Cs/133Cs ratios inside leaves that had sprouted before the accident were considerably higher than that of the soil extract and lower than that of throughfall and bulk precipitation. Additionally, more than 80% of 137Cs in throughfall and bulk precipitation was present in the dissolved form, which is available for foliar uptake, indicating that a portion of the 137Cs inside old leaves was presumably absorbed from the leaf surface. New leaves that sprouted after the accident had similar 137Cs/133Cs ratios to that of the old leaves, suggesting that internal 137Cs was translocated from old to new leaves. For 17 species of woody plants other than C. japonica, new leaves that sprouted after the accident also contained 137Cs, and their 137Cs/133Cs ratios were equal to or higher than that of the soil extract. These results suggested that foliar uptake and further translocation of 137Cs is an important vector of contamination in various tree species during or just after radioactive fallout.
Introduction
On March 11, 2011, the Great East Japan Earthquake and the following tsunami damaged the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (FDNPP). This accident emitted a large amount of 137Cs (8.8 PBq) (Terada et al., 2012) and contaminated a wide area (mainly forest) of eastern Japan (Morino et al., 2011). Similar contamination occurred in Europe as a result of the Chernobyl accident in 1986. According to the IAEA report (IAEA, 2006), contamination of forests with 137Cs is expected to persist for a long time because of the long half-life of 137Cs (30.2 years) and the limited removal of 137Cs from forest ecosystems; 137Cs is retained strongly in the forest floor and surface soil horizons. In addition, 137Cs is absorbed slowly from the soil via tree roots and eventually returned to the forest floor by canopy leaching and defoliation, although a portion of the absorbed 137Cs is immobilized in tree trunks. These mechanisms prolong radioactive contamination of forests.
Radioactive fallout deposited in forests is mainly intercepted by tree canopies (Ronneau et al., 1987, Melin et al., 1994, Kato et al., 2012) and gradually moves into soil and tree organs. In the forests around FDNPP, trees contained a considerable amount of 137Cs 2.5 years after the accident, mainly in their leaves and branches (Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, 2014). A portion of the foliar 137Cs was incorporated inside the leaf within a year after the accident (Koizumi et al., 2013, Tanaka et al., 2013). The internal 137Cs (137Cs present inside the leaf) may have been absorbed from the leaf surface and/or the root system (Tagami et al., 2012, Tanaka et al., 2013, Yoshihara et al., 2013), although clear evidence for which mechanism is more important has not yet been reported. Therefore, for future predictions of radioactive contamination of forests, we must elucidate how 137Cs is taken up by trees and how that process changes over time as well as the dynamic behavior (translocation) of 137Cs internally.
In this study, we aimed to understand the foliar uptake of 137Cs and its subsequent internal translocation from old to new leaves during the period immediately following radioactive contamination of Cryptomeria japonica, which is the most common tree species in planted forests in Japan. For this purpose, we analyzed C. japonica leaves, throughfall, bulk precipitation, soil extracts, and soil solution collected from a forest on Mount Tsukuba beginning shortly after the FDNPP accident until 15 months after the incident for their 137Cs levels and 137Cs to 133Cs concentration ratios (137Cs/133Cs). We also investigated the translocation of 137Cs to new leaves in many other tree species.
Section snippets
Sampling and pretreatment of C. japonica leaves
Sampling sites, the dates of C. japonica leaf collection, and related information are shown in Table 1. C. japonica is an evergreen conifer that is planted widely across Japan. Leaves (shoots) that sprouted in 2010 (before the accident) and 2011 (after the accident) (Fig. 1) were collected from the forest on Mount Tsukuba, located approximately 160 km southwest of FDNPP (site-A: Ishioka, Ibaraki, Japan; N36°11′56ʺ, E140°7′52ʺ) in November 2011, and March 2012. The stand age, mean tree height,
Uptake pathway of radiocesium in old C. japonica leaves
We measured the activity concentrations of 137Cs associated with C. japonica leaves washed with water or chloroform to demonstrate that foliar 137Cs was present both inside the leaves as well as on their surfaces. The activity concentrations of the water-washed leaves sprouted in 2010 at site-A and site-B were 960–1300 Bq kg− 1, while the activity concentrations were 210–490 Bq kg− 1 when leaves were washed with chloroform to remove the 137Cs on the epicuticular wax (Fig. 2). These results indicate
Acknowledgments
We thank Dr. A. Tanaka, Dr. T. Hiwatari, Mrs. M. Hirano, and Mrs. J. Kitajima (National Institute for Environmental Studies) for assistance with the analysis of 137Cs and 133Cs. This study was performed in part as a project contracted by the Ministry of the Environment, Government of Japan.
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