Issue 6, 2019

Assimilation and transport of organic bound tritium in an irrigated pine forest

Abstract

The speciation of radioactive tritium (T) in a naturally-established subtropical loblolly pine forest that has been irrigated with highly-contaminated pond water for the last 20 years is reported. This irrigation project was created to limit the underground transport of a tritium-rich plume which also contains low levels of toxic organics, metals and radionuclides such as carbon-14 (14C) from a nearby low-level waste burial ground. The levels of tritiated water (HTO) in the wood cores were not influenced by recent irrigation activities. However, the tritium levels in the last 20 years of tree growth were more than 3-fold higher than that of tritium in the older growth. This was due to recent irrigation with organic-bound tritium (OBT)-rich water and subsequent accumulation of high levels tritium as OBT relative to tissue HTO. High levels of pond irrigation water OBT resulted from biogenic processes that converted HTO to OBT. Data for 14C that were acquired for some of the forest materials indicated that the processes controlling the movement and accumulation of 14C in this system are somewhat different than that of tritium. Spectroscopic characterization of tree core tissue of <20 years in age found no explanation for the unusually wide dark growth rings. It was concluded that the trees were over-irrigated based on results from other published studies with wood from severely-flooded areas. Although HTO is indeed toxic to biota, OBT represents a relatively greater hazard to biota because it can be bioaccumulated and retained for long periods of time in living tissues.

Graphical abstract: Assimilation and transport of organic bound tritium in an irrigated pine forest

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 Apr. 2019
Accepted
02 Jūn. 2019
First published
10 Jūn. 2019

Environ. Sci.: Processes Impacts, 2019,21, 938-949

Author version available

Assimilation and transport of organic bound tritium in an irrigated pine forest

M. C. Duff, Wendy W. Kuhne, B. Viner, A. Swindle, A. L. Houk, S. Chiswell, D. B. Hunter and O. E. Rivera, Environ. Sci.: Processes Impacts, 2019, 21, 938 DOI: 10.1039/C9EM00165D

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