SREL Reprint #3163

 

Cesium accumulation by aquatic organisms at different trophic levels following an experimental release into a small reservoir

J.E. Pinder III1, T.G. Hinton1, B.E. Taylor1, and F.W. Whicker2

1Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, P. O. Drawer E, Aiken, SC 29802, USA
2Department of Environmental and Radiological Health Sciences,
Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523-1618, USA

Abstract: The rates of accumulation and subsequent loss of stable cesium (133Cs) by organisms at different trophic levels within plankton-based and periphyton-based food chains were measured following the addition of 133Cs into a small reservoir near Aiken, South Carolina, USA. An uptake parameter u (L kg-1 d-1 dry mass) and a loss rate parameter k (d-1) were estimated for each organism using time-series measurements of 133Cs concentrations in water and biota, and these parameters were used to estimate maximum concentrations, times to maximum concentrations, and concentration ratios (Cr). The maximum 133Cs concentrations for plankton, periphyton, the insect larva Chaoborus punctipennis, which feeds on plankton, and the snail Helisoma trivolvis, which feeds on periphyton, occurred within the first 14 days following the addition, whereas the maximum concentrations for the fish species Lepomis macrochirus and Micropterus salmoides occurred after 170 days. The Cr based on dry mass for plankton and C. punctipennis were 1220 L kg-1 and 5570 L kg-1, respectively, and were less than the Cr of 8630 L kg-1 for periphyton and 47,700 L kg-1 for H. trivolvis. Although the Cr differed between plankton-based and periphyton-based food chains, they displayed similar levels of biomagnification. Biomagnificationwas also indicated for fish where the Cr for the mostly nonpiscivorous L. macrochirus of 22,600 L kg-1 was three times less than that for mostly piscivorous M. salmoides of 71,500 L kg-1. Although the Cr for M. salmoides was greater than those for periphyton and H. trivolvis, the maximum 133Cs concentrations for periphyton and H. trivolvis were greater than that for M. salmoides.

Keywords: Cesium, Water column, Plankton, Periphyton, Invertebrates, Fish

SREL Reprint #3163

Pinder III, J. E., T. G. Hinton, B. E. Taylor, and F. W. Whicker. 2011. Cesium accumulation by aquatic organisms at different trophic levels following an experimental release into a small reservoir. Journal of Environmental Radioactivity 102(2011): 283-293.

 

This information was provided by the University of Georgia's Savannah River Ecology Laboratory (srel.uga.edu).