VARIABLE 24!am CONCENTRATION IN SOIL
UPTAKE AND C.R. IN BARLEY PLANTS

A. Wallace, R. T. Mueller, and E. M. Romney
Laboratory of Nuclear Medicine and Radiation Biology
University of California, Los Angeles

ABSTRACT

Barley plants (Hordeum vulgare L. Atlas 57) were seeded into small pots
of Yolo loam soil containing different concentrations of @*!Am (4,000,

10,000, 20,000, and 40,000 dpm/g soil).
Four successive harvests were
made with the first three harvests each of one-third of the original
plants, but of different ages.
One set of all concentrations was without
and one set with the chelator DTPA.
There were four replicates.
Plant
uptake of 24lam was related to concentration, but the C.R. decreased
slightly without DTPA (about 3x)

tenfold.

as the soil concentration was increased

With DTPA, uptake was proportional to concentration (that of

concentration of DTPA supplied was constant).
The effect of DTPA relative to that of no DTPA increased with increasing concentration of 241 am
in soil.
The C.R. under these conditions was reasonably constant, but
severalfold higher than without DTPA.
The last harvest contained less
24lam than did the first, both with and without DTPA.
The value of the

coefficient "Y" in the equation
(Cy/Co)* = uptake ratio

was about 50% lower without DTPA compared to with DTPA.

With DTPA the

value of "Y" was near 1, which implies that 241am in plants was directly
proportional to that in soil at all concentrations.

INTRODUCTION

The C.R. (concentration ratio) defined as the activity per weight of
plant part (or any biological organism) divided by activity per weight

or unit of substrate (ERDA, 1975) is the most frequently used means of

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