188 RECOVERY OF THE LAND PLANTS AT ENIWETOK ATOLL grandis) were abnormal in appearance at islands where the levels of radioactivity were lower. fecal droppings of the white-capped noddytern were more susceptible to radiation than others. Onthe other hand many of the abnormalities reported by Fosberg, St. John and Biddulph have been reported from coral atolls where no radioactive fallout has occurred. For example, defoliation and death at the tips of branches of Cordia, Pisonia and Tournefortia (Messerschmidia) On Canton Island the suggestion was made that the native birds were chiefly responsible for the dead or dying conditions of the forest and scrub vegetation.) Fosberg suggested that some species of plants were reported on Wake Island in April 1952, after a period of drought, by Fosserc.0) Taytor®?) reported that the vegetation at Bikini Atoll in March and April 1946 (before Operation Crossroads) was unhealthy-looking and that Pisonta plants bore only scanty foliage, improving later in the year. Records of rainfall in the northern Marshall Islands show that the dry period prevails from Decemberto April, the months ofJanuary and Februarygetting the least rainfall.) As shown by the observations of Fosberg and Taylor, one would expect to find the plants at their worst during the dry period. Some abnormalities found in the plants on coral atolls have been caused byinsects. Taylor reported that the leaves of Suriana were clipped as if by insect attack, and Fosberg reported that Bauhinia was chlorotic and badly eaten by insects. Niertnc@® reported that on Kapingamarangi Atoll the leaves ofScaevola were attacked by a leaf miner and new shoots and buds of Calophyllum sp. and Barringtonia asiatica were “infested to the point of disrupting the normal Other agencies also have been reported to cause chlorosis, die-back, slow growth, aberrant growth forms, and other kinds of plant abnormalities. Some causes not mentioned previously are salt spray, wind, storms, flying gravel, soil conditions and land crabs. Measurements of the amount of thermal radiation and blast received by the plants at Belle Island during the Nectar detonation were not made, but approximations of these values can be made on the basis of the energies required to produce the observed damage. A thermal energy of 10-15 cal/cm? is required to char vegetation and a wind velocity equivalent to 130-140 miles/hour is required to produce blast damage"? similar to that observed at Belle Island. Also, from calculations based on data obtained from other nuclear detonations,? the initial gammadose delivered at Belle Island was approximately 30 r, which is much lower than the levels required to cause visible plant damagein laboratory-type experiments. Essentially all of the damage to the land plants, therefore, can be attributed to the heat and blast Atoll members of this Laboratory noted infestations of a lepidopteran larva causing deformed leaves on Guettarda plants. They also reported that insects caused defoliation and bud rather than to the initial nuclear radiation, The excellent recovery of all but three of the plants (Guettarda, Lepturus, and Portulaca) is noteworthy, especially since the plants were subjected continuously to external radiation as well as the internal radiation from absorbed radioisotopes. The abnormal appearance and slow recovery of these plants, among the manyobserved, would appear to be due to radiation; however, the author feels that the other factors, which were not measured adequately during this investigation, should be evaluated carefully before ascribing the damageto radiation. ported that at Kapingamarangi Atoll the leaves of Asplenium, Nephrolepis, Guettarda and Pisonia were turning brown and dying because of the 1. Applied Fisheries Laboratory,* University of Washington (1947) Radiogiological resurvey of Bikini Atoll during the summer of 1947. U.S. Atomic Energy Commission report UWFL-7. growth pattern.” On Onotoa Atoll, Mout@” observed that several insects were found on Guettarda plants. These included wasps, moths, stink bugs, and butterflies. Moul reported also that leaves of Pisonia trees were so badly damagedby leaf-cutting bees that he could not find a perfect specimen offoliage. At Rongelap damagein plants of Terminalia sp. and Pisonia. ~ The bird population also is a factor’in the production of unhealthy plants. Niering re- a (Anous minutus marcust). He reported that the breadfruit tree also is damaged by these birds. REFERENCES

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