By John Gleeson originally posted to the Coast Reporter

Continue reading Sockeye Salmon, Inshore Waters Test Fukushima-Free
By John Gleeson originally posted to the Coast Reporter

Continue reading Sockeye Salmon, Inshore Waters Test Fukushima-Free
The Integrated Fukushima Ocean Radionuclide Monitoring (InFORM) project is a network involving academic, governmental, and non-governmental organizations, as well as citizen scientists. InFORM is acquiring data to support a thorough radiological impact assessment for Canada’s west coast stemming from the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant (FD-NPP) accident, and to effectively communicate these results to the public. The first measurements undertaken as part of the InFORM project to look for Fukushima derived radionculides were made on 19 fish in collaboration with the Nisga’a First Nation. Sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) and Steelhead Trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) were caught off the west coast of Canada in Summer 2014 as they were returning to the Nass River in northern BC.
Measurements of radioactive elements in these fish are reported in the data table below and are available for download through Health Canada:
|
Sample |
137-Cs (Bq/kg) |
134-Cs (Bq/kg) |
40-K (Bq/kg) |
210-Po (Bq/kg) |
|
Steelhead #1 |
< 1.5 |
< 1.3 |
155 (23) |
|
|
Steelhead #2 |
< 1.4 |
< 1.3 |
136 (21) |
|
|
Steelhead #3 |
< 1.4 |
< 1.4 |
126 (22) |
1.7 (0.5) |
|
Steelhead #4 |
< 1.4 |
< 1.3 |
146 (22) |
|
|
Steelhead #5 |
< 1.4 |
< 1.4 |
135 (21) |
|
|
Steelhead #6 |
< 0.9 |
< 1.8 |
158 (29) |
|
|
Steelhead #7 |
< 1.3 |
< 1.3 |
125 (21) |
|
|
Steelhead #8 |
< 1.4 |
< 1.3 |
113 (20) |
1.3 (0.4) |
|
Steelhead #9 |
< 1.5 |
< 1.4 |
136 (21) |
|
|
Steelhead #10 |
< 1.3 |
< 1.2 |
113 (21) |
|
|
Sockeye #1 |
< 1.9 |
< 1.8 |
187 (29) |
|
|
Sockeye #2 |
< 1.4 |
< 1.4 |
175 (23) |
|
|
Sockeye #3 |
< 1.3 |
< 1.3 |
148 (21) |
<0.2 |
|
Sockeye #4 |
< 1.4 |
< 1.3 |
160 (22) |
|
|
Sockeye #5 |
< 1.4 |
< 1.3 |
149 (22) |
|
|
Sockeye #6 |
< 1.3 |
< 1.4 |
129 (22) |
|
|
Sockeye #8 |
< 1.4 |
< 1.3 |
130 (22) |
|
|
Sockeye #9 |
< 1.3 |
< 1.3 |
142 (22) |
0.5 (0.2) |
|
Sockeye #10 |
< 1.4 |
< 1.4 |
112 (23) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Samples Combined (average) |
0.27 (0.04) |
< 0.18 |
168 (5) |
0.9 (0.3) |
Numbers with “<” indicate that levels were below the detection limit of the analysis and numbers inside parenthesis “( )” report the uncertainty associated with the measurement.
What are we measuring and why?
The triple meltdowns at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant (NPP) released many different radioisotopes to the environment, however only a very few of these are both measurable and unique to Fukushima. A reliable finger-print radioisotope for Fukushima is Cesium-134 (134-Cs half life ~ 2 years). This is because 134-Cs is only produced in nuclear reactors and it has a relatively short half-life, so that 134-Cs from other human sources, like the Chernobyl NPP disaster in 1986, are no longer present in the environment. Other isotopes such as Cesium-137 (137-Cs half life ~30 years) are not positive indicators of Fukushima since they were also a products of atmospheric testing in the 20th century and Chernobyl and are still present in the environment from these legacy sources.
How scientists talk about radioactivity in the environment
Scientists use a variety of units to measure radioactivity. A commonly used unit is the Becquerel (Bq for short) which represents an amount of radioactive material where one atom decays per second and has units of inverse time (per second). Another unit commonly used is disintegrations per minute (dpm) where the number of atoms undergoing radioactive decay in one minute are counted (so 1 Bq = 60 dpm). The measurements above represent that numbers of Bq detected in a kilogram of fish flesh.
Measurements of Sockeye Salmon and Steelhead Trout
We measured the activities of cesium radioisotopes 134-Cs and 137-Cs that were released in large quantities from the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant disaster in 2011. We also measured naturally occurring radioisotopes Potassium-40 (40-K) and Polonium-210 (210-Po) that always contribute doses of radiation to human consumers of marine fish. Samples of sockeye salmon and steelhead returning to the Nass River in northern BC, obtained from the Nisga’a First Nation, were analyzed and none were found to contain detectable levels of Fukushima derived radionuclides. By adding together the signals obtained for all of the samples we calculate an average activity concentration of 0.27 Bq/kg for 137-Cs. This represents residual 137-Cs in the North Pacific largely from atmospheric nuclear weapons testing in the last century. At present, Fukushima derived radionuclides cannot be detected. Nuclear weapons testing fallout (137-Cs) can be detected in BC fish at levels that represent a fraction of the radiation exposure owing to naturally occurring radionuclides neither of which represent a dangerous health risk to consumers in Canada. Results for a further ~80 fish collected this summer and fall from various returning runs up and down the BC coast will be reported as samples are analyzed.
The Importance of Salmon to Canadians
Pacific salmon are economically, culturally, and ecological significant species to British Columbia. On an annual basis, the commercial, recreational, and First Nation salmon fisheries contribute over $600 million in revenues. They are an important food source to First Nations and coastal communities, and numerous animal species such as endangered Killer Whales, Gray Wolf, Grizzly Bear, seabirds, and insects. They provide nutrients to freshwater ecosystems and riparian habitats through the decomposition of their carcass.
There are six species of Pacific salmon in British Columbia. During the first year of the project, InFORM will focus primarily on Sockeye Salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) and Steelhead Trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss), though other salmon species have and will be examined. Both species typically spend 2-3 years in the North Pacific Ocean prior to returning to their natal streams and venture further west than any other salmon species (Figure 1-2). On an annual basis, 1-10 million Sockeye Salmon are commercially harvested for human consumption and ceremonial purposes. In contrast, the fishery for Steelhead Trout is primarily catch and release due to conservation concerns for this species, particularly in Southern British Columbia. Although wild Steelhead Trout are not frequently consumed in Canada, their extensive westward migration that brings them close to the coast of Japan makes them an ideal canary species for monitoring radiation levels in salmon species originating from British Columbia.


Technical Information Regarding Sample Analyses
InFORM team members Dr. Erica Frank (UBC) and Karen Wristen (Living Oceans Society) sat down with Jill Krop on Unfiltered.
The purpose of this post is to report measurements of radioactivity in fish caught off the west coast of Canada based on the work of InFORM team member Dr. Jing Chen. A collaborative effort between Health Canada, Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada, and the University of Victoria was published in May 2014 in the peer-reviewed, open-access scientific journal Radiation Protection Dosimetry (link). The authors examined the activities of cesium radioisotopes (134-Cs half-life ~2 years and 137-Cs half-life ~30 years) that were released in large quantities due to the triple reactor meltdowns at Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant in 2011 as well as a naturally occurring polonium isotope (210-Po) that can pose radiological health concerns for human consumers of marine fish. Samples of chum and coho salmon, halibut, sablefish and spiny dogfish were analyzed and none were found to contain detectable levels of Fukushima derived radionuclides. Radiation doses to human consumers were determined by assuming a conservative worst case scenario where Cs isotopes were present at detection limits of the measurement and found to be 18 times lower than doses attributable to the naturally occurring, alpha-emitter 210-Po. The authors conclude that the radiation dose from Fukushima derived isotopes present in fish caught in Canadian waters represent a very small fraction of the annual dose from exposure to natural background radiation. Based on these measurements, at present, Fukushima derived radionuclides in fish do not represent a significant radiological health risk to Canadians. Continue reading Looking For Fukushima Radionuclides in Fish Caught Off the West Coast of Canada
Interview on Terry Moore’s program The Drive begins at the 5 minute mark and can be found