Title of article :
Fluxes of radiocaesium in selected rural study sites in
Russia and Ukraine
Author/Authors :
P. Stranda، نويسنده , , U، نويسنده , , M. Balonovb، نويسنده , , I. Travnikovab، نويسنده , , L. Skuteruda، نويسنده , , A. Ratnikovc، نويسنده , , B. Prister، نويسنده , , B. Howarde، نويسنده , , K. Hovef، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Abstract :
Food production and food harvesting systems common in the areas contaminated by the Chernobyl accident in
Russia and Ukraine can be grouped into three major categories: collective farm produce, private farming produce
and foods collected from natural ecosystems. The contribution of each of these sources to radiocaesium intake by
people living in rural settlements in the mid 1990s has been estimated at two major study sites, one in each country.
The collective farm system provided the smallest contribution 7]14%. to the intake of radiocaesium at both sites.
Natural food was the major contributor to intake at the Russian site 83%.. Whereas private farm produce was the
major contributor 68%. at the Ukrainian study site. The difference between the two sites was mainly because private
milk production was stopped at the Russian site due to the contamination in 1986. A retrospective assessment of the
situation 1 year after the accident shows that collective farming could have been a minor contributor to radiocaesium
intake 8%., whilst private farming would have been the major contributor wherever private milk production and
consumption continued. The extent to which inhabitants consume natural foods from forests has a considerable
effect on their radiocaesium intake. The comparative importance of food products from natural ecosystems increases
with time due to the long effective ecological half-lives of radiocaesium in unimproved pastures and forests.
Estimation of the fluxes of radiocaesium from the different production and harvesting systems showed that the
contribution from private farming and food harvesting from natural ecosystems may be significant, contributing
Keywords :
flux , Chernobyl , Natural foods , Internal dose , Radiocaesium
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment