83 research outputs found
Radionuclide monitoring in foodstuff: overview of the current implementation in the EU countries
Mutations observed in mitochondrial DNA of salmon collected in Mano River, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan
On March 11, 2011, a great earthquake occurred off the east coast of Honshu Island, Japan. The consequent breakdown of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (FDNPP) caused a massive release of radionuclides into terrestrial and marine environments and into the atmosphere. The Abukuma Mountains region is one of the areas highly polluted by this accident. Freshwater fishes continued to live in this area after the FNPP accident became so polluted.
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) usually transfers from the mother to the next generation clonally. Therefore, it is one of the best genetic predictors of the effect of radiation on DNA. The influence of radiation can be presumed by comparing mtDNA between larval fish and their female parent. mtDNA of masu salmon was collected from an area highly polluted, namely, the upstream portion of Mano River, and compared it with that from nonpolluted cultured masu salmon.
While no mutations were observed in the cultured masu salmon, those collected from Mano River exhibited three types of subdivisions in the Cytb region and two types of subdivisions in the D-loop region of mtDNA. These results suggest that exposure to radioactive cesium causes a base exchange in DNA. But the mutations observed were not serious enough to affect the masu salmon phenotype
Radioecological Studies, Selected papers presented at the International Conference on Environmental Radioactivity – New Frontiers and Developments
Isotope distribution of dissolved carbonate species in southeastern coastal aquifers of Sicily (Italy)
Concentrations of major ions and the δ13C composition of dissolved inorganic carbon in groundwater and submarine groundwater discharges in the area between Siracusa and Ragusa provinces, southeastern Sicily, representing coastal carbonate aquifers, are presented and discussed. Most of groundwater analysed belongs to calcium bicarbonate type, in agreement with the geological nature of carbonate host rocks. Carbonate groundwater acquires, besides the dissolution of carbonate minerals, dissolved carbon (and the relative isotopic composition) from the atmosphere and from soil biological activity. In fact, δ13C values and total dissolved inorganic carbon contents show that both these sources contribute to carbon dissolved species in the waters studied. Finally, mixing with seawater in the second main factor of groundwater mineralization Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
Monte Carlo simulation of environmental background sources of a HPGe detector operating in underground laboratory
Ultra-low-level determination of 236U in IAEA marine reference materials by ICPMS and AMS.
The development of analytical procedures for the measurement of ultra-low levels of U-236 in marine samples using high-resolution inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (HR-ICPMS) and accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) techniques are discussed and results are presented for IAEA reference materials-marine sediments (IAEA-135, 306, 384 and 385), marine biota (IAEA-134 and 414) and seawater (IAEA-381), collected in areas affected by nuclear reprocessing plants and nuclear weapons tests. The obtained minimum detection limit of the U-236/U-231 atom ratio was 1 x 10(-8) for AMS and 1 x 10(-6) for HR-ICPMS. © 2008, Elsevier Ltd
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