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Activities concentration of radiocesium in wild mushroom collected in Ukraine 30 years after the Chernobyl power plant accident
Author(s) -
Makiko Orita,
Yuko Kimura,
Yasuyuki Taira,
Toshiki Fukuda,
Jumpei Takahashi,
Oleksandr Gutevych,
Serghii Chornyi,
Takashi Kudo,
Shunichi Yamashita,
Noboru Takamura
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
peerj
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.927
H-Index - 70
ISSN - 2167-8359
DOI - 10.7717/peerj.4222
Subject(s) - mushroom , radionuclide , contamination , environmental science , nuclear power plant , environmental radioactivity , radioactive contamination , radiation exposure , internal dose , fukushima nuclear accident , toxicology , agaricales , effective dose (radiation) , radiochemistry , biology , chemistry , nuclear medicine , food science , botany , medicine , ecology , physics , quantum mechanics , nuclear physics , taxonomy (biology)
Mushrooms are recognized as one of the main contributors to internal radiation exposure from the activity concentration of radiocesium released by the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant (CNNP). We evaluated the activity concentrations of the artificial radionuclides (radiocesium) in wild mushrooms collected in 2015 from Korosten and Lugine, Zhitomir region, Ukraine, located 120 km away from the CNPP. Cesium-137 was detected in 110 of 127 mushroom samples (86.6%). Based on the average mushroom consumption (5 kg per year), we calculated committed effective doses ranging from 0.001–0.12 mSv. Cesium-137 remains in the wild mushrooms even 30 years after the accident, but the committed effective doses are limited by the amount of contaminated mushrooms consumed. However, evaluation of internal radiation exposure and assessment of environmental radioactivity in the surrounding area affected by the nuclear accident are still necessary in order to relieve anxiety about internal radiation exposure, as long as the possibility of consumption of contaminated mushrooms remains.

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