Literature DB >> 16406229

Transport and fate of radionuclides in aquatic environments--the use of ecosystem modelling for exposure assessments of nuclear facilities.

L Kumblad1, U Kautsky, B Naeslund.   

Abstract

In safety assessments of nuclear facilities, a wide range of radioactive isotopes and their potential hazard to a large assortment of organisms and ecosystem types over long time scales need to be considered. Models used for these purposes have typically employed approaches based on generic reference organisms, stylised environments and transfer functions for biological uptake exclusively based on bioconcentration factors (BCFs). These models are of non-mechanistic nature and involve no understanding of uptake and transport processes in the environment, which is a severe limitation when assessing real ecosystems. In this paper, ecosystem models are suggested as a method to include site-specific data and to facilitate the modelling of dynamic systems. An aquatic ecosystem model for the environmental transport of radionuclides is presented and discussed. With this model, driven and constrained by site-specific carbon dynamics and three radionuclide specific mechanisms: (i) radionuclide uptake by plants, (ii) excretion by animals, and (iii) adsorption to organic surfaces, it was possible to estimate the radionuclide concentrations in all components of the modelled ecosystem with only two radionuclide specific input parameters (BCF for plants and Kd). The importance of radionuclide specific mechanisms for the exposure to organisms was examined, and probabilistic and sensitivity analyses to assess the uncertainties related to ecosystem input parameters were performed. Verification of the model suggests that this model produces analogous results to empirically derived data for more than 20 different radionuclides.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16406229     DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvrad.2005.11.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Environ Radioact        ISSN: 0265-931X            Impact factor:   2.674


  3 in total

1.  Radionuclide transport and uptake in coastal aquatic ecosystems: a comparison of a 3D dynamic model and a compartment model.

Authors:  Anders Christian Erichsen; Lena Konovalenko; Flemming Møhlenberg; Rikke Margrethe Closter; Clare Bradshaw; Karin Aquilonius; Ulrik Kautsky
Journal:  Ambio       Date:  2013-05       Impact factor: 5.129

2.  Seasonal changes of 137Cs in benthic plants from the southern Baltic Sea.

Authors:  Tamara Zalewska
Journal:  J Radioanal Nucl Chem       Date:  2011-12-20       Impact factor: 1.371

3.  Distribution of 137Cs in benthic plants along depth profiles in the outer Puck Bay (Baltic Sea).

Authors:  Tamara Zalewska
Journal:  J Radioanal Nucl Chem       Date:  2012-03-25       Impact factor: 1.371

  3 in total

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