Abstract

The concentrations of 239+240 Pu and 137 Cs in zooplankton and nekton in the Northwest Pacific and Southern Oceans were measured during the period 1993–1996. The object of the sampling was to assess the potential impacts of existing submerged anthropogenic-radioactive materials in the western North Pacific as well as the East China Sea. Samples from the Bransfield Strait of the Antarctic Ocean provided a control source impacted by only atmospheric bomb fallout. No particularly elevated levels of 239+240 Pu were found in zooplankton samples from the Northwest Pacific, although significantly lower levels of 239+240 Pu were found in three mixed zooplankton samples from the Bransfield Strait. The body burden of 239+240 Pu in zooplankton appears to reflect concentrations in ambient seawater with some variation. Some additional measurements of 137 Cs in fish are also reported here to complement existing databases and for future reference in the regional marine environmental radioactivity monitoring effort.

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