224 1 DR. 9 BUGHER: It depends on how hungry you are. Is the big cocoanut crab eaten? CDR. CRONKITE: 4 | DR. BUGHER: There must be come reason for that. 7 the surveys, specimen material of these various indigenous g fauna would be desire to these varbus groups concerned with 9 these analyses. 10 Under natural foodstuffs, do we mean the plants or the plants and fish? 12 CDR. CRONKITE: 13 DR. BUGHER: 144] 1h All of it. Specimens have been taken of cocoanuts| I1 believe. 15 HR. COHN: Cocoanuts, bannanas, papayas. I think, however, at the time the specimens were taken, it was too 17 early to expect any incorporation of the fission products int ig the plant material itself. 19 study this at later intervals. 20 plan ts. 21 fact that there is very high activity in the sap of the cocoa- 221 nut tree. 23 some time later. 24 Loop, 2, — 16 However, it will be desirable to That material does get into We have pretty good indications of it in the - - Alderson Reporting Company Washington, D. C They at practically everything other than that. 6} ARC They didn't list that aab, as I recall, in their list of items that they used. gs 11 4 This is bound to be incorporated into the fruit DR. BUGHER: Yu had cocoanut samples, too. MR. COHN: There was no activity found in the cota 225