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of the isotope.

In the converse situation where the ecological

half life is less than’ the physica] half life, a net loss of the
isotope is indicated.

This condition coyld result from loss of

the isotope by the environment, or eco-system, or from & physiological change in the organism or its primary food source.

Such

physiological changes may be transitory or seasonal.
The increase in radioactivity over preshot levels during

the first few days after the Nectar test was less in muscle and
carapace than in the four other tissues by a factor of 5 to 10.
Maximum post-Nectar levels of activity were 100 to 250 times
greater than pre-Nectar levels in gut, liver, and gill, but only

22 and 26 times greater in muscle and carapace
The lower rate of accumulation in muscle and

respectively.
carapace would be

expected since the material must be absorbed from the
hepatopancreas where some selection takes. place.

gut and

The specific

patterns of changing radioactive content of the tissues with.time,

rate of decline, will be presented individually for each tissue.
The amounts of radioisotopes involved are so smsll that they

probably do not constitute a significant proportion of the naturally occurring isotopes.

If, for example, a tissue contained

107 a/m/g wet of Sr2°, or 5,000 times the maximum level found in
DOE ARCHIVES
the hermit crab,

this would represent only 0.02 mg of strontium,

or about 107° per cent of the ash weight.

The

presence of

strontium has been reported qualitatively in crustacea and @
quantitative estimate of about one per cent strontium has been
given for the ash of Eupagurus bernhardus.??

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