Estiner Walusungu
Katengeza
*a,
Yukihisa
Sanada
b,
Kazuya
Yoshimura
b,
Kotaro
Ochi
b and
Takeshi
Iimoto
a
aDepartment of Environment Systems, Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, The University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-8654, Japan. E-mail: ekatengeza@poly.ac.mw
bFukushima Environmental Monitoring Division, Collaborative Laboratories for Advanced Decommissioning Science, Japan Atomic Energy Agency, 45-169 Kaihama-sukakeba, Minamisoma, Fukushima 975-0036, Japan
First published on 6th July 2020
Plastic scintillation fibers (PSFs) have been instrumental in in situ surface contamination surveys post the Fukushima Daichi Nuclear Power Plant accident. Their deployment to monitoring bottom sediments in aquatic environments provides the spatial extent of contamination over wide areas compared to discrete points as provided traditionally by sediment sampling. This study evaluated the wide area ecological half-life (Teco) of radiocesium concentration for surface sediments of five ponds in Fukushima using PSFs, monitoring data generated between 2013 and 2019. The least squares' regression method was employed to evaluate the Teco. Four ponds had a Teco ranging from 3.0 ± 0.3 years to 11.4 ± 2.3 years. A forest-catchment pond exhibited a relatively long Teco of 41.6 ± 55 years. Local variation in the Teco appears to be influenced by sedimentation as we demonstrated larger values for areas showing potential sedimentation in the forest catchment pond. This study demonstrates the importance of wide area in situ monitoring techniques, such as PSF, in providing an overview of the spatial-temporal trends of radiocesium in bottom sediments and confirms the importance of forests as secondary contaminant sources to their drainage.
Environmental significanceIn aquatic environments, most radiocesium is bound to sediments. Characterizing radiocesium concentration in surface sediments is, therefore, critical for assessing the associated risk to the ecosystem. However, due to labor and cost associated with sediment underwater sampling and subsequent radioactivity analysis, spatial distribution studies/monitoring for radiocesium in the waterbed are limited. Consequently, long-term impacts are defined mainly for discrete points. In situ techniques may potentially solve this problem and this study employed plastic scintillation fibers to monitor wide areas of five agricultural ponds in Fukushima and subsequently evaluated the ecological half-life of radiocesium concentration in the surface sediments. This provides practical parameters for the impact of the radionuclide in these media and their surrounding catchment and drainage. |
In Fukushima prefecture, apart from lakes, rivers, and the ocean; agricultural ponds are of special interest because of their important role in supporting people's livelihood through irrigation agriculture. The prefecture has over 3700 ponds.8 Radiocesium levels in sediments of ponds located in areas affected by the FDNPP accident often exceeded 10 kBq kg−1.9 The solid–liquid distribution coefficients, kd, of radiocesium in the ponds were higher or comparable to those of lakes and rivers10,11 and an enrichment effect was observed for the ponds' bottom sediments relative to their catchments' soil.10 These ponds, like reservoirs, may buffer12–15 or spread15,16 as radiocesium.
Most sediment studies of radiocesium in aquatic environments focus on the vertical profiles: their distribution;3 their temporal vertical shifts;17 and on modelling radiocesium migration processes. Earlier vertical profiles for agricultural ponds in Fukushima had peaks within the surface layer (0–5 cm)5,12 with a sharp decrease in concentration beyond that layer. In more recent profiles,18 though dependent on sampling location, radiocesium concentration appears to peak below the surface layer with a more gradual falloff beyond the peaks suggesting a downward migration over time. Very few studies document the temporal changes of radiocesium in surface sediments19,20 and so far in Fukushima, no known studies have attempted to evaluate such changes in agricultural ponds. However, evaluating the decreasing rate of radiocesium in bottom sediments is important because sediments account for the largest proportion of the total radiocesium concentration.10 Specifically, surface sediments are important because they make radiocesium available for biological circulation21 and redistribution via dissolution, resuspension, erosion, and hydraulic flushing.
Temporal changes in radiocesium concentration can be quantified by the effective half-life which accounts for both physical decay and ecological processes20,22,23 or the ecological half-life which excludes physical decay.24 Most documented effective or ecological half-lives of radiocesium6,19,20,22–24 in either soil or sediments were evaluated from sediment samples thereby providing values for discrete points. Sediment sampling underwater is labour-intensive, long, and becomes expensive for wide area coverage.25 Consequently, limited or small sample sizes are characteristic of many sediment studies, which prevents observation of and accountability for spatial heterogeneities across wide areas.25
In situ measurement techniques offer an alternative or complement to conventional sampling25–27 for wide area spatial distribution under water. Examples of their deployment for radiocesium waterbed surveys include the Fangataufa and Mururoa lagoons26,27 which were nuclear weapon test sites; the Irish sea in the vicinity of the Sellafield Reprocessing Facility26,27 and off the coast of FDNPP in Japan.29–31 A clear observation is that these studies have primarily focused on marine environments whose underlying hydrodynamics are different from shallow lentic water bodies such as agricultural ponds. With Fukushima's abundance of agricultural ponds, the Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA) developed plastic scintillation fiber (PSF)32,33 detector technology for in situ monitoring of their bottom sediments. This technique enables observation of spatial variation in contamination over wide areas. Good agreement was observed between radiocesium concentrations estimated by the PSF and mean radiocesium concentration of sediment cores averaged to a 10 cm depth32,33 thereby validating the results.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the ecological half-life of radiocesium over wide areas of pond surface sediments based on in situ measurements with PSF. Typical ecological half-life estimations focus on surface sediments19,20,22,24 based on grab samples or the top layers (up to 10 cm depth) of sediments. The effective depth of PSF considered in this study is 10 cm based on the thickness of sediment core samples used to calibrate the PSF concentration since it started being applied.32,33 Therefore, the temporal changes reflect what is occurring in this layer of sediments and can provide some useful radioecological information. This is not a radiocesium migration study but rather a study of the overview of the spatial-temporal trends of radiocesium concentration over wide areas of bottom sediments based on in situ measurements with PSF. It is the first attempt to evaluate the ecological half-life over wide areas of bottom sediments, to use in situ measurements in bottom sediments to estimate the ecological half-life, and to study the ecological half-life in bottom sediments of ponds. The ecological half-life is evaluated in the context provided by Prohl et al.24 where all processes contributing to a decline in radioactivity, excluding physical decay and human actions such as decontamination (herein, only within the pond), are integrated. It lumps together all potential contributors, within the bulk upper 10 cm surface-sediment layer.
![]() | ||
Fig. 1 Radiocesium deposition map (a) showing locations of the sampled ponds. The number corresponds to the code for each pond e.g. point 1 is for pond P1. Satellite images (b–f) show the positions of each pond (unbroken line) and its catchment (broken line). Deposition map is based on the 5th airborne monitoring survey by the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT).34 Satellite images © ArC GIS, ESRI, Co, Ltd., USA. |
Pond | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
a Ministry of the Environment designation for decontamination works; SDA: special decontamination areas; ICSA: intensive contamination survey areas. b Calculated by ArCGIS, ESRI, Co, Ltd., USA. | |||||
Characteristic | P1 | P2 | P3 | P4 | P5 |
Town/local govt | Iitate | Motomiya | Motomiya | Koriyama | Futaba |
Area designationa | SDA | ICSA | ICSA | ICSA | SDA |
Latitude | 37.701801 | 37.513944 | 37.500787 | 37.376372 | 37.348583 |
Longitude | 140.687407 | 140.478589 | 140.422833 | 140.346835 | 141.013197 |
Elevation (m) | 498 | 299 | 252 | 250 | 29 |
Distance from FDNPP (km) | 44 | 52 | 56 | 63 | 8.5 |
Surface area (m2)b | 2320 | 5350 | 858 | 4770 | 5420 |
Catchment (m2)b | 303![]() |
117![]() |
— | — | — |
Catchment![]() ![]() |
131 | 22 | — | — | — |
Depth (m) | |||||
Maximum | 3.2 | 3.4 | 1.2 | 2.3 | 5.9 |
Mean | 1.1 | 2.1 | 0.8 | 1.7 | 4.0 |
Minimum | 0.2 | 0.7 | 0.4 | 1.4 | 0.9 |
Catchment land use (%) | |||||
Forest | 100 | 50 | — | — | — |
Cultivation (paddies, etc.) | — | 40 | — | — | — |
Infrastructure (road, building, etc.) | — | 10 | — | — | — |
Pond | Year | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | |
P1 | 7–11 Aug | 28 Aug–14 Sep | 1–6 Sep | 12-Dec | 12–13 Sep | 27–28 Aug | |
P2 | 31 Jul–2 Aug | 10–12 Mar | |||||
14–15 Oct | |||||||
P3 | 11–13 Apr | 24–25 Sep | 4–5 Mar | 1–4 Sep | |||
24–26 Sep | 13–14 Oct | ||||||
P4 | 11–13 Nov | 3–7 Sep | 2–5 Sep | 4–6 Sep | |||
P5 | 28–31 Oct | 20–24 Aug | 26 Aug–16 Sep | 11-Dec | 7–8 Aug |
Fig. 2 shows a schematic of the PSF measurement system, adopted from Sanada et al.32 The radiation counts are measured by placing the PSF at the bottom of the ponds where radioactive emissions, mostly gamma rays but also beta particles, produce directional scintillation light in the fiber. A time-to-amplitude converter outputs a positional total count spectrum to a computer based on the arrival time difference of the scintillations at each PMT. Positional resolution and the linearity between source and the peak channel are checked by 137Cs point sources as described by Nohtomi et al.35 Routine calibration before and after deployment uses radiocesium-spiked concrete calibration pads in a water tank. The conversion factor from the total count rate to the activity concentration was obtained by correlation with ex situ measurements of sediment core samples. This process and its results are explained in the next section. The minimum detection limit for radiocesium in ponds was 61 Bq kg−1.32 The PSF measurements were taken linearly as shown in Fig. 3 with a spacing of 5 m between the lines. Approximately the same positions and lines were used during each campaign.
![]() | ||
Fig. 2 The PSF measurement system adopted from Sanada et al.32 |
![]() | ||
Fig. 3 PSF measuring lines in each studied pond. Also shown are the inlets and outlets of each pond. Satellite images © ArC GIS, ESRI, Co, Ltd., USA. |
Each pond was divided into grids, the concentration in each mesh was averaged and the mean value was allocated for that mesh. The number of data points used for temporal analysis were determined by the campaign that produced the least data points. This corresponds to the smallest areas on radiation maps which were generated through interpolation by the Kriging method using a geographic information system software, ArC GIS (ESRI Co, Ltd., USA).
A total of 81 sediment cores were collected from the ponds at points coinciding with PSF measurement lines. Cores were collected using an HR type core sampler (Rigo, Co. Ltd., Japan) after which they were sectioned at 5 cm intervals and each section was analysed for radiocesium concentration (Bq kgwet−1), on a wet basis, using a p-type high-purity germanium detector of 18% relative efficiency (GEM20-70, Ortec, Seiko EG&G, USA) coupled to a multichannel analyser (MCA 7, Ortec, Seiko EG&G, USA). The average water content of these sediment samples (0–10 cm) was 60.2% (Min: 52.0%; Max: 81.0%). Standard gamma sources were used to calibrate the spectrometer: 241Am, 109Cd and 152Eu (EG-CUSTOM, Isotope Products Laboratories, USA); 210Pb and 137Cs (EG-CUSTOM, Isotope Products Laboratories, USA). PSF are a total count system, hence the measured 137Cs and 134Cs concentrations for the top two layers (totalling 10 cm depth) were summed and averaged, then compared with the count rate obtained by the PSF. Fig. 4a shows the comparison between the radiocesium concentration of sediment core samples and the counts obtained by the PSF system. To account for outliers observed in the scatter plot (Fig. 4a), a CF was calculated for each PSF-core data set and the median (309 cps (Bq kgwet−1)−1) of their frequency distribution (Fig. 4b) was considered appropriate and applied in this study. The standard deviation of the CF, 165 cps (Bq kgwet−1)−1, accounts for 53% of the median value. Uncertainty may arise from: (a) imprecise PSF-coincident core sampling points due to possible instability of boats during sampling; (b) variation in water content and radiocesium concentration depth profile of the core; (c) the detection mechanism of PSF because it does not distinguish the type and energy of the detected radiation, which is predominantly gamma rays but can include beta particles; and (d) inefficient detection of gamma rays at the deeper end of the depth captured by PSF, which is up to 10 cm. Despite these potential sources of uncertainty, there was a strong agreement (R2 = 0.81, Fig. 4a).
![]() | ||
Fig. 4 Relationship between radiocesium concentration by sediment core samples and the counts obtained by the PSF measurement system (a) and distribution of conversion factors (b). |
To minimize point (a), care was taken to collect core samples within 20 cm to 2 m of PSF lines. Assuming unchanging water content of the sediments, points (b) to (d) would have a negligible effect on the temporal trend within the 10 cm surface sediment layer because measurement lines were maintained in each campaign so that differences would serve to reflect changes occurring within the surface layer captured by PSF.
![]() | (1) |
![]() | (2) |
![]() | ||
Fig. 5 Distribution of the relative deviation of PSF-determined 137Cs concentration to that of core samples. |
There is a tendency for higher concentration of radiocesium in deeper areas (Fig. 6a–e) in the ponds, similar to the observation for the Chernobyl-derived radiocesium inventory in Lakes Päijäne39 and Høysjøen40 in Finland and Norway respectively. These observations of enhanced sediment (and, consequently, radiocesium) accumulation in deeper parts of the waterbed were defined as sediment focusing. This effect was also observed with FDNPP-derived radiocesium on the waterbed of the Ogi reservoir41 and the Ukedo river estuary.42 Thornton et al.30 observed patterns of elevated radiocesium concentration at bases of protrusions in the seabed near FDNPP using a towed gamma spectrometer. Our results reveal the occurrence of similar phenomena in ponds. For P1 (Fig. 6a(i–vi)) and P2 (Fig. 6b) these deeper and higher concentration areas are at the outlets while the inlets have lower concentrations. Ohnuma and Ishii18 found coarser low-concentration sediments prevailing at inlets and finer radiocesium-rich sediments dominating at the outlets of ponds. Funaki et al.3 observed a similar trend in sediment size distribution between the inlet and outlet of the Ogaki dam. The finer sediments dominating at outlets was attributed to lower settling velocities which transport them further than the heavier and courser sediments.3 This particle size dependence may reflect our results.
a 0 (Bq kg−1) | T eco (years) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Mean | 95% confidence level | Mean | 95% confidence level | |
P1 | 2.6 × 103 | (2.2–3.0 × 103) | 41.6 | (−14.0 to 97.1) |
P2 | 6.3 × 103 | (6.0–6.5 × 103) | 4.2 | (3.9–4.5) |
P3 | 3.0 × 104 | (2.8–3.2 × 104) | 3.0 | (2.70–3.3) |
P4 | 7.3 × 103 | (6.8–7.7 × 103) | 11.4 | (9.1–13.7) |
P5 | 1.6 × 104 | (1.5–1.6 × 104) | 9.7 | (8.3–11.1) |
The observed apparent sedimentation in P1 seems contradictory to the expectation of low soil erosion from forest catchments.7,45
However, findings by Walling and Quingping,46 Yoshimura et al.45 and Taniguchi et al.7 show that sediments eroded from forested or, generally, uncultivated catchments tend to be radiocesium-rich. This is the most probable explanation for the observation in P1. Sometimes sedimentation may result in an overall increase in concentration so that the Teco takes on a positive value. This is captured within the large standard deviation of P1's Teco. On the other hand, radiocesium concentration is relatively smaller in sediments eroded from cultivated46 and/or decontaminated47 catchments even though erosion rates are higher therein. Therefore, comparable quantities of sediments entering P2–P5 may have relatively lower radiocesium concentration than in P1. This may also explain the observed Teco. Decontamination efforts in Fukushima's Special Decontamination Areas (SDA) and Intensive Contamination Survey Areas (ICSA) prioritise living spaces including infrastructure, farmlands and only portions of forests near areas frequented by people.48 Whole area decontamination was completed on 19 March, 2018 in ICSA and on 31 March 2017 and 4 March 2020 in Iitate and Futaba respectively.49
To observe the local variability in the Teco across P1, a grid by grid analysis was conducted. Each 5 m by 5 m grid had six data points, one for each campaign. The grids had been categorized according to the evaluated Teco with category A of a Teco less than 5 years, category B Teco between 5 and 10 years, category C Teco between 10 and 100 years, and category D Teco over 100 years. No negative Teco was observed. Fig. 8 shows the distribution of the Teco in P1, color-coded for each category. The grids were 19% category A, 16% category B, 15% category C and 50% category D. Most category D grids coincide with areas displaying possible sedimentation such as the top-left inlet, extending to a portion of the central area, and the deepest parts of the pond at the outlet, including the hotspot region (Fig. 6a). Juranova et al.20 interpreting a long 137Cs Teco (370 ± 450 years) of sediment sampled at the Otava Pisek tributary of Vltava river in The Czech Republic, suggested an effective blocking of 137Cs removal by ecological processes as a result of sediment aging in combination with 137Cs influx from the catchment. Fukushima et al.17 observed a monotonic increase in the FDNPP-derived radiocesium inventory at the centres of four Japanese lakes, which was attributed to catchment input or lateral sediment transport within the lakes. Similarly, the inter-grid Teco variations may be related to levels of sedimentation. They may also be associated with granulometry, mineralogy, and geophysical chemistry, which are outside the scope of the present study. Even though this technique does not provide the exact ecological processes, an overview of what is occurring has been obtained, which can optimize sediment sampling for specific migration studies.
The Teco for P2 to P5 range from 3.0 to 11.4 years (Table 3). P3 was decontaminated prior to the first measurement campaign and has the shortest Teco but it is presently unclear if this is responsible for the observed Teco. No correlation was observed between the Teco and the pond characteristics among P3–P5.
While a short Teco, such as for P2 to P5, may be considered a form of spontaneous decontamination, recontamination concerns may arise for areas onto which the ponds irrigate or overflow if hydraulic flushing is the dominant process. On the other hand, the longer Teco, for example in P1, generates concerns regarding long-term secondary supply of radiocesium from the catchment. The 137Cs average concentration for 52 Finnish lakes in 1992 was 27.4% of that in 1987,50 equivalent to a Teco of 2.93 years.
It was not possible to make a statistical comparison among the ponds by catchment type and dominant land use due to limitations in the available data. However, the results can be used as case studies on the applicability of PSF to overview the relative distribution of radioactivity and quantify the temporal trends over wide areas from averaged data. Additionally, ponds are a type of lentic system characterized by mostly static waters unless agitated by winds or rains. There are no documented studies on the radiocesium Teco for bottom sediments of ponds associated with fallout from nuclear tests and the accidents in Chernobyl and Fukushima. Also, lentic system studies have focused on larger lakes with radiocesium migration as the dominant research theme. Thus, this study provides novel case studies for (a) the Teco of radiocesium in sediments of ponds in Fukushima, (b) evaluating the Teco of radiocesium over wide areas of bottom sediments and (c) evaluating the Teco of radiocesium in the bottom sediments using in situ measurement with PSF. The Teco is an apparent value including both removal or downward migration of sediment and additional sedimentation. However, this apparent value can represent the real temporal change of radiocesium concentration in surface sediment making it a practical radioecological parameter.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/d0em00160k |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020 |