Estimating biological half-lives of 137Cs in a cyprinid fish Tribolodon hakonensis by a one-compartment model considering growth dilution effect
Japanese dace Tribolodon hakonensis rearing experiments were conducted to estimate parameters related to 137 Cs uptake and excretion processes. Fish (initial mean total length 256 mm, 136 g) were reared at 20 °C for 182 days using the same daily ingestion rate (1% of body weight for 6 days per week)...
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Published in | Fisheries science Vol. 86; no. 5; pp. 861 - 871 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Tokyo
Springer Japan
01.09.2020
Springer Nature B.V |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Japanese dace
Tribolodon hakonensis
rearing experiments were conducted to estimate parameters related to
137
Cs uptake and excretion processes. Fish (initial mean total length 256 mm, 136 g) were reared at 20 °C for 182 days using the same daily ingestion rate (1% of body weight for 6 days per week) with three feeding regimens: feeding contaminated pellets (80.7 Bq/kg-dry of
137
Cs) throughout the experiments (
137
Cs uptake group), feeding contaminated and non-contaminated pellets respectively for days 0–40 and days 42–180 (
137
Cs uptake–excretion group), and feeding non-contaminated pellets throughout the experiments (control group). Samples were taken periodically. The
137
Cs concentrations in muscle tissues (MU) and whole bodies (WB) were measured using Ge detectors. The
137
Cs concentrations in fish that had grown to 240 g by day 182 reached 45.5 Bq/kg-wet in MU and 37.0 Bq/kg-wet in WB in the
137
Cs uptake group. A one-compartment model incorporating the growth coefficient estimated that the biological half-lives of
137
Cs in MU and WB excluding the growth dilution effect (216 days and 233 days, respectively) were longer than the apparent biological half-lives (100 days and 104 days) observed in the
137
Cs uptake–excretion group. The developed method can contribute to promoting precise prediction of radiocesium contamination of fish affected by the Fukushima fallout. |
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ISSN: | 0919-9268 1444-2906 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s12562-020-01452-y |