4.7 Article

Artificial 137Cs and natural 40K in mushrooms from the subalpine region of the Minya Konka summit and Yunnan Province in China

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages 615-627

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-017-0454-8

Keywords

Asia; Forest; Mushrooms; Topsoil; Radiocaesium; Potassium

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31660591]

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A study on Cs-137 pollution and activity concentrations of K-40 in mushrooms of the genera Cortinarius, Leccinum, Russula, Tricholoma, Tylopilus, and Xerocomus from two neighboring regions in southwest China in 2010-2013 revealed different patterns of pollution with Cs-137, which seemed to be highly dependent on climate conditions. Tricholoma matsutake was collected in Yunnan before and after the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear accident and showed similar contamination with Cs-137. Mushrooms from the elevation of 2800-3480 m above sea level on the east slope of Minya Konka and forest topsoil showed higher contamination with Cs-137 than mushrooms from the highlands of Yunnan. In detail, the activity concentration of Cs-137 in caps of mushrooms from Minya Konka were in the range 62 +/- 6-280 +/- 150 Bq kg(-1) dry biomass and from Yunnan at < 4.4-83 +/- 3 Bq kg(-1) dry biomass. The climate in the region of the Minya Konka is much colder than in Yunnan, which seems to favor deposition of Cs-137 at higher altitudes from global atmospheric circulation. The activity concentration of K-40 in mushrooms and soils highly exceeded that of Cs-137. The assessed annual effective doses for Cs-137 in 1 kg of consumed mushrooms of the genera Leccinum and Xerocomus in Yunnan were low, i.e., in the range < 0.0043-0.049 +/- 0.004 mu Sv, while those for K-40 were 0.26 +/- 0.02-0.81 +/- 0.09 mu Sv.

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