the animals were injected with americium, as opposed to plutonium; nuclide retention in the liver was also greater for animals that had received americium; a marked similarity existed in the nuclide deposition pattern following ingestion of either Am-241 chloride or citrate-buffered Pu-238 nitrate. (Editor's note: The acknowledgments paragraph of Sutton’s report includes several additional EPA personnel who have assisted in NAEG large animal studies, performed at the NTS experimental farm. Their assistance in these studies has been greatly appreciated by the NAEG/Department of Energy.) Americium-241 studies were also reported by J. Barth, EPA. The alimentary solubility and behavior of Am-241 were investigated in an artificial rumen and simulated bovine gastrointestinal fluids. Barth stated that the data indicate that Am-241 administered as Am-241 nitrate solution remains soluble in ruminant digestive fluids to considerable degree. In most digestive stages, the solubility of Pu-238 was greater than that of Am-241, when both were in nitrate solution. Barth discussed the results with those of an EPA Am-241 metabolism study with dairy cows in order to predict tissue retention and milk secretion of field-deposited Am-241 ingested by cattle grazing in Area 13 of the Nevada Test Site. Data was presented by Smith, EPA, concerning the NAEG long-term grazing Study with a reproducing beef herd on a plutonium-contaminated intensive study site in Area 13, NTS. Food habit analyses were discussed with implications for relationships between actinide concentrations in the ingesta and Eurotia lanata content. Other interesting information reported by Smith related to the Pu-239 concentrations in bone, lung, and liver collected from wildlife with free access to and from the plutoniuncontaminated study site. Concentrations in bone, lung, and liver ranged from 1 percent to 10 percent of those in the cattle confined to the intensive study site. A brief summary of the long-term study concluded Smith's report. Au and Beckert, EPA, presented results of a study to determine whether plutonium associated with fungal tissue could be taken up by a successive generation, or whether it becomes immobilized after metabolism by the fungus. Their results indicated that such transfer is possible to the spores of new growth, using Aspergillus n. A summary was also included concerning the previous NAEG microorganism studies of plutonium transport in the NTS environment. Plant uptake of Pu and Am through roots was investigated further by Romney, Wallace, and Kinnear, UCLA, using NTS soils. Their evaluation of recent results indicated that vegetation-~to-soil concentration ratios (C.R.) varied from 1075 to 1073 for 239°24 py, and from 107% to 107! for 24 lam, depending on the type soil and agricultural amendments applied; that generally Am was taken up by plants at a faster rate than Pu; that DTPA chelate increased root uptake of both Pu and Am when added with nitrogen, organic matter, or sulfur amendments; C.R. values were lower for fruit than for vegetative parts of soybeans; Am was slightly more available for transport from shoots to fruits of soybeans than Pu. 740

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