Cesium absorption through roots may have long-term effect on farming
By MIZUHO AOKI
Staff writer
Six months after the nuclear meltdowns in Fukushima
Prefecture, the public's awareness of the threat posed by radiation is entering
a new phase: the realization that the biggest danger now and in the future is
from contaminated soil.
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The iodine-131 ejected into the sky by the Fukushima No. 1
power station disaster was quickly detected in vegetables and tap water — even
as far away as Tokyo, 220 km south of the plant.
But contamination levels are now so low they are virtually
undetectable, thanks to the short half-life of iodine-131 — eight days — and
stepped up filtering by water companies.
But cesium is proving to be a tougher foe. The element's
various isotopes have half-lives ranging from two to 30 years, generating
concern about the food chain in
Fukushima Prefecture, a predominantly agricultural region, as
the elements wash fallout into the ground.
The root of the problem is, well — roots.
Cesium-134 and cesium-137 are viewed as potential health
threats because vegetables can absorb the isotopes from the soil they're
planted in.
"Until early spring, produce was contaminated (on the
surface with radioactive materials) that the No. 1 plant discharged into the
atmosphere. But now, the major route of contamination is through plant roots,"
said Kunikazu Noguchi, a radiation protection expert at Nihon University.
Whether absorption by plant roots can affect human health
remains to be seen. Experts are warning that the region's soil and agricultural
products will require close monitoring for many years.
At the moment, sampling data collected by the various
prefectural governments indicate that no vegetables, except for those grown in
Fukushima Prefecture, have been found to contain more than the government's
provisional limit of 500 becquerels per kilogram since June.
Likewise, as of Sept. 7, samples of pork, chicken, milk and
fruit had also tested within the provisional radiation limit, apart from
Fukushima products and tea from Chiba, Kanagawa, Gunma, Tochigi, Saitama and
Ibaraki prefectures.
In fact, the amount of radioactive materials in most of the
food sampled has been steadily declining over the past few months, except for
produce from Fukushima.
"The results of Fukushima's sampling tests show the
amountof radioactive material contained in vegetables has dropped sharply in
recent months, including those grown in areas with high radiation levels,"
Noguchi said.
"People shouldn't worry about it much (for the time
being)," he said. "But mushrooms and other vegetables grown in
contaminated forests are likely tocontain high levels of radioactive
materials."
Now that soil in a wide area of eastern Japan has been
contaminated with cesium, experts are calling for close monitoring of soil and
produce.
The education ministry conducted soil surveys in June and
July at 2,200 locations within 100 km of the crippled plant. At 34 locations in
six municipalities in Fukushima Prefecture, including Minamisoma, Namie and
Iitate, the data said cesium levels had exceeded 1.48 million becquerels per
sq. meter — the same level that was used to define the exclusion zone around
Chernobyl in 1986.
Yasuyuki Muramatsu, a radiochemistry professor at Gakushuin
University, said that agricultural contamination will likely peak this year
because cesium binds more strongly with minerals in soil as time passes, making
it more difficult to be absorbed by plant roots.
"Data from the Chernobyl disaster show that radioactive
cesium in soil tends to become fixed more strongly to clay minerals as time
passes. So agricultural contamination will lessen next year," he said.
Muramatsu urged that special caution should be taken over
products grown in soil rich in organic matter, such as in forested areas.
"If the soil is rich in organic matter, it makes
(cesium) more easily transferable to plants. . . . Forest soil is rich in
organic matter, so people should be careful," he said.
"This year, it's very important to conduct thorough
surveys. The contamination will continue for a long time, so data collection is
essential," Muramatsu said.
"We need to be prepared for the following years by
recording data this year and studying the rate at which cesium in the soil is
absorbed by each kind of produce," Muramatsu said.
In the meantime, the radioactivity itself will continue to
weaken over the years. Cesium-134 has a half-life of 2 years and cesium-137 a
half-life of 30 years, meaning the radiation they emit will drop by half in 2
years and 30 years.
The ratio of cesium-134 to cesium-137 in the Fukushima
accident is estimated as 1-to-1, while the ratio during the 1986 Chernobyl
disaster was 1-to-2. This indicates the radiation in Fukushima will weaken at a
faster rate than at Chernobyl.
Between April and early August, the farm ministry tested soil
at some 580 locations in six prefectures, including Fukushima, Tochigi and
Gunma, to get a better picture of the full extent of contamination.
According to the results, 40 locations in Fukushima
Prefecture had an intensity exceeding 5,000 becquerels per kilogram — the
government's maximum limit for growing rice. Many municipalities within 30 km
of the Fukushima No. 1 plant were banned from planting rice based on similar
tests conducted in April.
In addition, the ministry has asked 17 prefectures in eastern
Japan to conduct two-phase radiation tests on harvested rice.
So far, none of the tests performed on unmilled rice —
including from Fukushima — exceeded the government's limit of 500 becquerels
per kilogram.
Masanori Nonaka, an agriculture professor at Niigata
University who specializes in soil science, said rice grown in contaminated
areas is likely to be tainted, but to what extent is anyone's guess. White
rice, however, may prove to be safe, Nonaka said. Because most of the
radioactive material will adhere to the bran — the part of the husk left behind
after hulling — about 60 percent of the cesium can be removed just by polishing
it, he explained.
Other foods, such as marine produce, won't be as easy to handle,
experts say. After the Chernobyl accident, for example, the radioactive
contamination of fish peaked between 6 to 12 months after the disaster.
The Fisheries Agency, meanwhile, has asked nine prefectures
on the Pacific coast to increase their sampling rates to prevent contaminated
fish from landing in supermarkets.
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