| Literature DB >> 8880966 |
A Baumann1, W Schimmack, H Steindl, K Bunzl.
Abstract
The effect of soil sterilization by chloroform fumigation on the release of fallout radiocesium incorporated in the fungal biomass of the organic layer of two forest soils was investigated by applying a sequential extraction procedure for radiocesium. The amount of the biomass in all soil samples was estimated by determination of the dissolved organic carbon (DOC) before and after fumigation, and qualitatively also by the ergosterol test. The five fractions obtained by sequential extraction (modified Tessier procedure) were: (I) easily exchangeable, (II) bound to oxides, (III) bound to organic matter, (IV) persistently bound, (V) residual. For the samples from the soil under spruce trees, no significant effects were apparent in any of these five fractions as a result of chloroform fumigation, indicating that the amount of radiocesium in the biomass of this soil was obviously negligibly small compared with the radiocesium associated with other soil constituents. The results obtained for the soil samples from the beech stand, however, reveal that the destruction of the biomass by chloroform fumigation modified considerably the extent of the association (i.e., binding) of radiocesium with the various other soil constituents (especially the clay minerals). As a result of this rapid redistribution of radiocesium released by the fungal biomass, it is not possible, in general, to attribute the observed increase of radiocesium in fraction I (easily exchangeable) after soil sterilization quantitatively to radiocesium released by the biomass. A reliable method to determine the amount of radiocesium incorporated in the fungal biomass of the soil samples which also contain clay minerals has, therefore, still to be developed.Entities:
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Year: 1996 PMID: 8880966 DOI: 10.1007/s004110050034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Environ Biophys ISSN: 0301-634X Impact factor: 1.925