TABLE 2
PLUTONIUM CONCENTRATION AND CONCENTRATION RATIOS (CR)
OF VEGETATION IN THE ENVIRONS OF SAVANNAH REVER

Vegetation

Location

a

Pu Concentration
(pCi g7!)

a % 238py

b

CR

0

Annual-Biennial

A

1.78

62

1.5 x 10

Perennial

A

0,836

63

7.2 x 10

Briar

A

0.217

69

1.9 x 1074

Wheat Straw

A

0.088

58

7.5 x 10

Plum

B

0.084

75

2.1 x 10

Honeysuckle

e

Camphorweed®

-1

-2
-1
-l

C

e.010

50

ll x 10

c

0.013

48

1.4 x 10 -1

®concentratione of Pu in soil were 1,16 pci g-!, 0.40 pCi g-!, and 0.09 pci g7!
for locations A, B, and C respectively.
econcentration ratio is [Pole (Pula oan,
“Data from McLendon et al., 1976.

Plant habit may affect interception and retention of Pu according to data of
Table 2. At site A, containing the highest soil Pu, plants exhibiting
the
annual-biennial habit (Solidago, Aster, and Gnaphalium) contained the most Pu
followed by perennial species (briars and Grasses) and wheat, which contained
the least Pu, The comparison of Pu concentration of the annual-biennia
l and
perennial habit at site A was confounded by the latge quaritity of dead material
that was included in the perennial! samples which could have diluted the
concentration, The comparison is more appropriate at site C with camphorweed
(annualbiennial) and honeysuckle (perennial). At this site, the concentrations
were
essentially identical. The low Pu concentration and CR of wheat indicate the
effect of the short time of exposure to the airborne Pu. Concentration ratios
for native vegetation at site A ranged from 0.2 to 1.5. With an a % 2398py
value of about 60 in the native vegetation, the Pu was attributed to deposition
of airborne Pu on leaf surfaces,
At sites B and C, which contained successively lower soil concentrations of
Pu, CRs were about 0.1. The high ao % 738Py value suggests airborne Pu as the
source,
Relative contribution of airborne Pu by direct deposition vs. surface contamination by suspended particles of soilborne Pu was estimated from serial wheat
samples (Table 3),
Early in the season (March), when leaves are in close
proximity to the soil surface, the isotopic ratio of 735pu/239pu was similar
to that of the suspendible fraction (38 vs. 43). Later in the season (April,
June), when leaves have extended 50 to 100 cm above the soil surface, the a 4%
238pu value of approximately 60 reflects increased deposition of airborne Pu.
Plutonium concentration and CR decreased from March to April.
During this
period of rapid plant growth, the values decreased because of biomass accumulation occurring simultaneously with a constant Pu deposition rate. The Pu
concentration and CR increased from April to June because of lower biomass
The changes in the Pu content and
accumulation while Pu deposition continued.
a % 738py over the three-month period indicate the importance of duration of
exposure of the foliage to an airborne source.

INCORPORATION OF PLUTONIUM BY VEGETATION
VIA THE ROOT PATHWAY

Root uptake is an important route for Pu incorporation into vegetation once
the element becomes part of the soil matrix.
This pathway is particularly
important over extended time intervals in humid and heavily vegetated environments where contamination of leaf surfaces by suspended soil particles is not
a major contributor of Pu to vegetation.
The contaminated floodplain site at
Oak Ridge ts representative of such conditions, and experimental results from
field studies describe root uptake of Pu by native species and vegetable crops
(Table 4).

310

Select target paragraph3