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Long-term changes in 90Sr pools of Scots pine biomass in the Chornobyl Red Forest

The trenches of the waste burial site in the Chornobyl Red Forest represent a big reservoir of radionuclides for the artificial plantation of Scots pine established in that area, but the long term dynamics of tree biomass contamination, especially with 90Sr, remains unclear. The present study was co...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of environmental radioactivity 2024-03, Vol.273, p.107366-107366, Article 107366
Main Authors: Yoschenko, Vasyl, Thiry, Yves, Holiaka, Dmytrii, Levchuk, Sviatoslav, Kashparov, Valery, Nanba, Kenji
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The trenches of the waste burial site in the Chornobyl Red Forest represent a big reservoir of radionuclides for the artificial plantation of Scots pine established in that area, but the long term dynamics of tree biomass contamination, especially with 90Sr, remains unclear. The present study was conducted between 2005 and 2018 on two groups of trees of the same age. The IN group is represented by trees growing on the trench containing highly radioactive contaminated fertile soil and organic matter, while the OUT group is located outside the trench. Within a little more than one decade, the total aboveground biomass doubled in the trees of the group OUT and increased more than four times in the group IN. In the group OUT, the concentrations of 90Sr have decreased in all biomass compartments compared to 2005, while in the group IN, the concentrations demonstrated a trend to increase. Regression analysis shows that both decrease in the compartment concentrations in the group OUT (slope coefficient 0.55) and increase in the group IN (1.58) were significant. As a result of the changes in the biomass inventories and 90Sr concentrations, in absence of changes in plantation density, the contamination of total aboveground biomass by 90Sr in the group OUT would have increased slightly in 2018 (from approximately 18 GBq ha−1 to 23 GBq ha−1) compared to 2005, while in the group IN it would have increased almost 6-fold, reaching approximately 560 GBq ha−1, or about (19 ± 9) % of the total 90Sr inventory in the trench area. Trenches of the Red Forest were shown to act as long-lasting hot spots of 90Sr bioavailability for forest trees. •Long-term changes in 90Sr inventories in biomass of a Scots pine plantation.•Two groups of trees under study in the Chornobyl Red Forest.•90Sr concentrations increased in trees growing in the trench with radioactive waste.•Trees in the trench accumulated (19 ± 9) % of total 90Sr inventory in the trench area.
ISSN:0265-931X
1879-1700
DOI:10.1016/j.jenvrad.2023.107366