Accumulation of natural and anthropogenic radionuclides in body profiles of Bryidae, a subgroup of mosses
2019
Zhong, Qiangqiang | Du, Jinzhou | Puigcorbé, Viena | Wang, Jinlong | Wang, Qiugui | Deng, Binbin | Zhang, Fule
Mosses can be used as biomonitors to monitor radionuclide deposition and heavy metal pollution in cities, forests, and grasslands. The aims of this work were to determine the activity concentrations of natural (²¹⁰Po, ²¹⁰Pb or ²¹⁰Pbₑₓ (excess ²¹⁰Pb is defined as the activity of ²¹⁰Pb minus the activity of ²²⁶Ra), ⁷Be, ⁴⁰K, ²²⁶Ra, ²³⁸U, and ²³²Th) and anthropogenic radionuclides (¹³⁷Cs) in moss body profiles and in situ underlying soils of moss samples and to assess/determine the distribution features and accumulation of these radionuclides. Activity concentrations of radionuclides in the samples were measured using a low-background gamma spectrometer and a low-background alpha spectrometer. Consistent with their source, the studied radionuclides in the moss samples and underlying soils were divided according to the principal component analysis (PCA) results into an airborne group (²¹⁰Po, ²¹⁰Pb (²¹⁰Pbₑₓ), ⁷Be, and ¹³⁷Cs) and a terrestrial group (⁴⁰K, ²³⁸U, ²²⁶Ra, and ²³²Th). The activity concentrations of ²¹⁰Po and ²¹⁰Pbₑₓ in moss body profiles were mainly concentrated in the stems–rhizoid parts, in which we measured some of the highest ²¹⁰Po and ²¹⁰Pbₑₓ levels compared to the results in the literature. ⁷Be mainly accumulated in the leaves–stem parts. Different positive correlations were observed between ²¹⁰Po and ²¹⁰Pb and between ⁷Be and ²¹⁰Pb, which indicated that the uptake mechanisms of ²¹⁰Po, ²¹⁰Pb, and ⁷Be by moss plants were different, to some extent. ¹³⁷Cs was detected only in some moss samples, and the fraction of ¹³⁷Cs in the underlying soils was much lower than that in the moss, suggesting that mosses were protecting the underlying soils from further pollution. Except for ⁴⁰K, the terrestrial radionuclide (²³⁸U, ²²⁶Ra, and ²³²Th) content in mosses was predominantly at low levels, which indicated not only the inability of mosses to use those elements for metabolic purposes but also the rather poor capability of mosses to directly mobilize, absorb, and transport elements (U, Ra, or Th) not dissolved in water.
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