in the skin and gut of the sea cucumber, and on the outer surfaces of algae and land plants.
Usually the crab c&rapace was prepared for ashing without any attempt to scrub or scrape the surface.
however,
In one instance,
one half of the carapace was prepared as usual while
small amounts of algae and unidentified material were scraped
from the surface of the other half.
These scrapings were found
to have a specific activity more than ten times that of the
carapace as a whole (150,000 d/m/g compared with 14,000 d/m/g).
When the small proportion of the total weight of the carapace
represented by the surface material is considered,
" that little
it is clear
if any of the radioactivity was actually deposited
in the exoskeleton.
A similar situation was found with clam shell,
erial scraped from the
where mat-
surfece had a specific activity 68 times
that of a portion of the shell teken as a whole (6800 d/m/g
“compared to 100 d/m/g).
In this case the surface material
makesup an even smaller proportion of the total weight than it
does
in the crab carapace.
Contamination of the skin of a species of sea cucumber,
H. atre,
is evident from @ comparison with a second species,
Stichopus sp., collected at Aaraanbiru (Table 19). A total
of nine
specimens was collected
in four to seven feet of water
within an area of less than one thousand square feet.
The two
species live side by side and are both detritus feeders.
H.
atra, however, has a habit of coating itself with sand while
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