~ 10 - quickly taken by another. There is here a perfect economy of use of substances essential to life. Available substances are rapidly taken up by the biota, never remaining diluted and washed away. long in the water to be This is dramatically demonstrated following an atomic test in which radioactive materials are deposited in the water. Within hours, the great bulk of these materials to is to be found in the living organisms. Plankton and some of the algae, which are the key organisms in the food chain, may concentrate within themselves more than a thousand times the amount of radioactive substances found in the sea water. The herbivorous fish and invertebrates have lower concentrations of radionuclides at any given time than do the plants on which they feed, and progressing along the food chain to the carnivores the concentrations become lower and lower. Within each organism there is a differential concentration from tissue to tissue, the digestive organs having a higher concentration than the other tissues, where a more selective deposition as to specific isotopes has taken place. More specifically, plankton, the oceanic plants and animals that drift about passively with little or no resistance to water movements, may influence greatly the distribution of radioactive materials in the sea. These forms include many groups of organisms from the simple one-celled plants to the larval forms of vertebrates. Plankton acquire radioisotopes by absorption, adsorption, or both. Plankton, especially phytoplankton,

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