Conrad Cyler, Inglis Jeremy, Wende Allison, Sanborn Matthew, Mukundan Nilesh, Price Allison, Tenner Travis, Wurth Kimberly, Naes Benjamin, Fair Jeanne, Middlebrook Earl, Gaukler Shannon, Whicker Jeffrey, Gerard Jamie L, Aguilera Washington Tapia, Gibbs James P, Wolf Blair, Kattil-deBrum Tonie K, Hagemann Molly, Seminoff Jeffrey A, Brys Timothy, Brown Rafe, Derieg Katrina M
Earth Systems Science Division, Risk and Environmental Assessment Group, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, P.O. Box 999, Richland, WA 99352, USA.
Department of Anthropology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USA.
PNAS Nexus. 2023 Aug 22;2(8):pgad241. doi: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgad241. eCollection 2023 Aug.
Chelonians (turtles, tortoises, and sea turtles) grow scute keratin in sequential layers over time. Once formed, scute keratin acts as an inert reservoir of environmental information. For chelonians inhabiting areas with legacy or modern nuclear activities, their scute has the potential to act as a time-stamped record of radionuclide contamination in the environment. Here, we measure bulk (i.e. homogenized scute) and sequential samples of chelonian scute from the Republic of the Marshall Islands and throughout the United States of America, including at the Barry M. Goldwater Air Force Range, southwestern Utah, the Savannah River Site, and the Oak Ridge Reservation. We identify legacy uranium (U and U) contamination in bulk and sequential chelonian scute that matches known nuclear histories at these locations during the 20th century. Our results confirm that chelonians bioaccumulate uranium radionuclides and do so sequentially over time. This technique provides both a time series approach for reconstructing nuclear histories from significant past and present contexts throughout the world and the ability to use chelonians for long-term environmental monitoring programs (e.g. sea turtles at Enewetok and Bikini Atolls in the Republic of the Marshall Islands and in Japan near the Fukushima Daiichi reactors).
龟类(海龟、陆龟和玳瑁)随着时间的推移会在盾片角质层上依次形成多层结构。一旦形成,盾片角质层就成为环境信息的惰性储存库。对于生活在有遗留或现代核活动地区的龟类来说,它们的盾片有可能作为环境中放射性核素污染的时间标记记录。在这里,我们测量了来自马绍尔群岛共和国以及美国各地的龟类盾片的总体样本(即均质化盾片)和连续样本,包括犹他州西南部的巴里·M·戈德华特空军靶场、萨凡纳河场址和橡树岭保留地。我们在龟类盾片的总体样本和连续样本中识别出了遗留的铀(U和U)污染,这与这些地点在20世纪已知的核历史相匹配。我们的结果证实,龟类会生物累积铀放射性核素,并且随着时间的推移依次累积。这项技术既提供了一种时间序列方法,用于从世界各地过去和现在的重要背景中重建核历史,也提供了利用龟类进行长期环境监测计划的能力(例如马绍尔群岛共和国埃尼威托克和比基尼环礁以及日本福岛第一核电站附近的海龟)。