./& POTASSIUM IN DRIED MILK PROpUOTS SAMPLING STATIONS IN THE WNoRTHY 1959-JUNE 1960, GROUPED aCcCORDING VEGETATION ZONES ‘o.. of mples Prectpitaavg. ™7Cs tion total pe/g K inches 65 a9 67 67 ? ave. 90 65 51 avg. 61 20 29 avg. 54 avg. 29 76 58 31 78 70 73 73 92 42 43 22 43 49 34 avg. 37 55 °% of ppt in winter months 52 47 lo a 37 —_ 12 — 9 18 55 49 9 _ avg. 12 28 — tations showed the coniferous iving an average of 61 in. from 11960. This was compared with 12 in. from grassland and sageIt is realized that precipitation ms probably do not represent of the precipitation over the 1evertheless, natural vegetation iveness of precipitation and fhe be used to delimit long-term long been recognized by plant al precipitation in the northnot sufficient to differentiate zone climates®. The seasonal on in the sage-brush zone is iths, while that of the grassland pring and’ summer (Table 1). 1 greatly influence the amounts 1 foliar surfaces. In temperate seasonal agricultural yield foliar ts the amounts largely accumu- relation to the cesium-137 content of milk an analysis of variance was performed which included seasonal effects. The hypothesis of no zonal effect was rejected at the 1 per cent level of significance. Additional inferences were obtained by subsequent tests for judging contrasts’. All three contrasts between means were significant at the I per cent level. The computed values: $,12 pe. cxesium-137/g potassium; ),>-32 cesium-137 pe./g potassium; where +, is the difference between the meansof the grassland zone and the sage-brush zone and , is the difference between the means of the forest and grassland zones. This work was performed under contract No. AT(45—1)-1350 between the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and the General Electric Co. W. H. Rickarp A. D. Wiccrns Biology Laboratory, Applied Mathematics Operation. ‘ Hanford Laboratories, General Electric Co., J. K. FrRemMstTap Richland, Washington. 1 Kulp, J. L., Sehulert, A. R., Hodges, E. J., Anderson, E. C., and Langhan.> W. H., Setence, 183, 1768 (1961). 1 Health and Safety Lab. Strontium Program, Quart. Summary Rep., HASL-77 88, 95 (1960). ‘Shantz, H. L., and Zon, R., in Atlas of American Agriculture, Pt. 1, Sect. &, 29 (U.S. Dept. Agric., Washington, D.C., 1924). ‘Langham, W. H., and Anderson, E. C., Health Phys,,2, 30 (1959). * Low, K., and Fdvarson, K,, Nature, 187, 736 (1960). “Daubenmire, R., Plants and Environment (Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York, 1947). Sen) The Analysis of Varianee (Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York hotosynthetic period. Forages brush zone seldom experience growth water is supplied by d zone growth of forage crops oincide to yield higher czsium1e non-synchrony ofbiological nd lower cesium-137 values in am-137 content of dried milk : moist forest zone appears itation in this zone in contrast rush zones. The lower average iducts produced in the sageissland zone appear as a result nological and meteorological agement practices. effect of vegetation zones in Printed im Great Britain by Fisher, Knight & Co., Ltd., $1. “Albans.

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