Fungi can be used as biomonitors for assessing radioactivity in our environment

 

       Radioactive contamination is the unwanted presence of radioactive substances in the environment. Our environment is contaminated by naturally-occurring and anthropogenic radionuclides, unstable isotopes of an element that releases radiation and as it decomposes it becomes more stable which are present in the air, soil, rain, etc. These radionuclides can be transferred throughout the food chain until reaching humans and this could lead for a potential health risk.

       Until now, to study the presence of radionuclides in different products for human consumption and their subsequent transfer, research has been based fundamentally on foods such as meats, fish or milk, without considering a foodstuff like fungi which are well known for accumulating concentrations of some radionuclides in their fruiting bodies. As a result, the Environmental Radioactivity Laboratory of the University of Extremadura (LARUEX) had carried out a study to quantify radioactive presence in this foodstuff. The author of the study Javier Guillén explained that the quantification was made using transfer coefficients that compare the radioactive content in the receptor compartment of the radioactive contamination (that is to say in the fungi) to that existing in the transmitter compartment (which in this case would be the soil).

       To conduct this research the authors considered the base level of radionuclides established in ecosystems with low radioactive content and then used the software called the ERICA Tool which allows one to enter the transfer coefficient from the soil to the organism thus calculating the dose of radionuclides a non-human organism receives.

       From the study, it may be concluded that the estimated dose rates for fungi are similar to those determined for other animals (animals and plants) and therefore this species can be used when assessing for the presence or absence of radioactive contamination in the soil. As a result, the researcher asserted that even though it is not strictly necessary to include fungi amongst the existing instruments and frameworks of assessment, they can be used in ecosystems which may require them based on criteria such as biodiversity.

       Moreover, in the cases of the fungi analyzed, which are concentrated in the Mediterranean area it should also highlight the fact that they do not contain a high dose of radionuclides, meaning there is no environmental contamination and they are therefore perfectly suitable for consumption by humans.

 

 

Fig. Fungi can be used when assessing the presence or absence of radioactive contamination in the soil.

Image Credit: Uex

 

Source: www.sciencedaily.com

ENVIS CENTRE Newsletter Vol.15, Issue 3, Jul - Sep, 2017
 
 
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