SSION aluate the Tecovery an d t the Eniwetok Prov ing fifteen months aft er vere made in 1949 by LPH,(®) They rep orted ites in ten specie s of ‘ where atomic deto naand where radiat ion higher than those on Nectar survey. Th ese lattening, shortenin g, ‘sion of stems, severe nd Stems, chlorosis , umpling and twisti ng “ms, proliferation and nees, abnormal pro erility of plants. St. mutant of Guettarda t did not describe it. ng and splitting of mson Aitsy (Olive ) xetween two of the he plants closest to dere radiation levels -verely affected. In ls were lower, the habitats” was re-~ in excluding plants liation effects from 'y many of the ° growth after the occurred in im- anic nutrients an d ‘ons are known to ich can sometimes ce of the plant. In has been removed the surface layer 1g In the curling, he shallow-rooted s€rvations it may he abnormalities used by factors re, it would be f the causes of where radiation “xist. In areas of of this damage 187 R. F. PALUMBO ILL Table 1. The regrowth ofScaevola sp. (Plant No. 1319) at Belle Island, Eniwetok Atoll,from May 22, 1954 to March 15, 1955 following the detonation of May 14, 1954 at a site two and one-half miles away | }\ Date | Appearance ' | 4/15/54 | | 5/22 Healthy; green flowers and fruits present | Plant badly damaged, stems naked and broken; some burned and green | New leaves on stems; branches still scrawny- looking 8/12 9/14 11/2 11/30 3/15/55 Most leaves green and healthy; plant not as bushy as in April Plant as healthy and bushy as in April Height 75 90 A few plants observed with 45 40 : 65 |S 75 75 ; 1 16 75 90 «=| 20 78 95 100 of various kinds,“similar to those found at the Eniwetok total | | gamma dose delivered in these experiments ranged from 780 r to 5,550 r. In more recent studies with conifers Sparrow) observed that doses as low as 3x and 4 r/day caused death of Pinus rigida after six years of exposure (total cumulative dose, about 8,000r). Many plants, however, were dead or dying at doses much below this cumulated dose, and some visible damage was observed at doses below 3 r/day. 1 " 125 Flowers present on Scaevola Plant No. 1209, Area C Flowers present on Scaevola Plants No. 1209 and No. 1213, Area A, and others 20 20 | could be attributed to the radiation, because it has been shown in controlled field experiments, with several plants, that chronic doses of gamma radiation of 13-37 r/day for two to five months The ! floral on this plant | Yellowing of oldest leaves Proving Ground. | persistent No flowers observed on | 7 Plants healthy, larger than in April, many flowers abnormalities parts 75 | 90 plant Remarks 16 | 75 only; plant healthy, no ] i leaves (cm) |! Growth normal in every respect; small flowers present flowers or fruits can cause diameter (cm) | (em) | leaves persist at terminals 6/19 . Length of Over-all larger | | | Some Scaevola plants 2 20 metres in height Observations made in February 1956 in the Marshall Islands by Fosperc®?” also suggest possible radiation damage to plants twentythree months after an incidence of high-level radioactive fallout. He found severe damage in the land plants (Guettarda speciosa, Cocos nuctfera, Suriana maritima and others) at Gegen Island, Rongelap Atoll, where the ‘total radiation dose to infinity” was reported to be 3,360 r. Wherethelevels of radiation were 10-100 times lower, little or no damage was observed. How- ever, some species (Guettarda, Lepturus repens, and Fleurya ruderatis) appeared to be normal at Kabelle Island where the radiation level was high (total dose 1,824 r). Other species (Suriana, Cordia subcordata, Cocos nucifera and Pisonia

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