UPTAKE AND TRANSPORT OF RADIOACTIVE CESIUM AND STRONTIUM INTO STRAWBERRIES AFTER LEAF CONTAMINATION

Citation
Hj. Zehnder et al., UPTAKE AND TRANSPORT OF RADIOACTIVE CESIUM AND STRONTIUM INTO STRAWBERRIES AFTER LEAF CONTAMINATION, Gartenbauwissenschaft, 58(5), 1993, pp. 209-213
Citations number
24
Categorie Soggetti
Horticulture
Journal title
ISSN journal
0016478X
Volume
58
Issue
5
Year of publication
1993
Pages
209 - 213
Database
ISI
SICI code
0016-478X(1993)58:5<209:UATORC>2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
Radioactive cesium was quickly taken up by the leaves of strawberry pl ants. Eight weeks after foliar application about 90 % of the total rec overed radioactive isotope Cs-134 was incorporated into the plant.The other 10 % was not taken up and could be washed off the leaves. Until that time 75 % Of the total recovered cesium activity was transported from the leaves to other plant organs, while 15 % stayed in the leaves . Forty-four percent of the transported activity was transferred to th e berries and 22 % to other organs. Three percent was detected in the daughter plants and 6 % was found in the pot soil. In the same period only 44 % of the total recovered strontium was detected in the treated and washed leaves. Less than 10 % was found in the untreated plant pa rts and soil. Neither fruit, runner plants nor roots contained any rad ioactive strontium at this time. Since activity was detected in the ro ots only at the very beginning of the experiment, the strontium detect ed in the soil could have been introduced by contamination. Most of th e strontium taken up by the leaves was stored in these organs. The dan ger that radioactive cesium, liberated by a nuclear incident, will be taken up by leaves of food plants and transported into the edible part s is real and is, in an initial phase, substantially greater than the danger of an uptake by the roots, because cesium in the soil is fixed by certain clay minerals. With strontium the danger of redistribution from radioactive contaminated leaves into other plant organs is small. However, the possibility of contamination of edible plant parts with radioactive strontium from the soil, transported in the xylem from the root to the shoot, is real.