Abstract

Spatio-temporal variations in the technetium-99 content of Fucus serratus samples from the French coast of the English Channel were studied between 1982 and 1984 using various sampling strategies. The lack of constancy in measurements from within the seaweed zone of the same station is revealed by a variation of 18% in the mean contents of samples collected from different sampling levels, a variation which reaches 41% if the extreme values of all results are taken into account. Regional variations over the Channel as a whole show an asymmetric diminution of the 99Tc content of the seaweed on the two sides of the liquid effluent discharge outlet from the reprocessing plant at La Hague and this confirms a predominant drift of Channel waters towards the North Sea. Variations with time at three stations during 1983 and 1984 have revealed that there is a time-lag between fluctuations observed in the discharges and those in F. serratus. In addition, a periodic component observed at the Roscoff and Wimereux stations, where the 99Tc content of the seaweed varies by a factor of 2–3 between winter and summer periods, could be correlated with seasonal changes both in the metabolic state of F. serratus and in the currents to the south-west of Cap de La Hague. 99Tc, which here has no radiological impact on man, would thus appear to be a radioactive label for sea waters and one which is particularly sensitive to variations in environmental conditions.

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