Abstract

The aims of the present research are to describe the amounts, and the variation with time, of 134Cs and 137Cs in spruce-twigs ( P. abies karst.) and in the soil of a spruce forest in Switzerland following deposition of the Chernobyl fallout. The activity of the twigs was subdivided into 3 compartments: the activity on their surfaces (i.e. the activity which can be removed from the twigs along with their natural wax coating), the activity incorporated into the needles and, finally, the activity incorporated into the wood. These compartments were separately sampled 6 times over a period from 54 to 233 days after the Chernobyl incident. Twigs which sprouted in two successive years (1985, 1986) were sampled and were found to show different behaviours. The activities associated with the 1986 twigs were roughly constant with time, while those of the 1985 twigs decreased exponentially, with half-lives around 150 days. The mean activity associated with 1 g (dry) of 1985 twigs is 724 mBq 137Cs g −1, of which 58% is incorporated into the twig wood, 17% into the needles and 25% associated with the adhering aerosol. 137Cs on the surface of the needles was found to be water-insoluble. It is believed to be strongly adsorbed on to the soil-derived fraction of the aerosol residing on the needle surface and thus provides a tracer for studying the behaviour of natural aerosols on such surfaces. The same soil profile was measured before and after the Chernobyl incident, allowing direct comparison between nuclear weapons and Chernobyl fallout. The latter is mainly (56%) stored in the litter layer, with only 4% below a depth of 13 cm; it has penetrated into the soil to a much lesser extent than weapons fallout. The forest soil inventory of 137Cs showed 2600 Bq m −2 from nuclear weapons fallout and 6200 Bq m −2 from Chernobyl. The 134Cs/ 137Cs activity ratio of the Chernobyl fallout was found to be 0·58 ± 0·01; the activity ratios in the different compartments investigated prove that incorporation of Cs into spruce occurred exclusively by uptake through the needles. A rough estimate indicates that in a spruce forest the activity stored in the twigs is half that stored in the soil.

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