Pacific Bluefin tuna caught off the coast of California have been
found to have radioactive contamination from last year's Fukushima
nuclear accident.
The fish would have picked up the pollution
while swimming in Japanese waters, before then moving to the far side of
the ocean. Scientists stress that the fish are still perfectly safe to
eat.
However, the case does illustrate how migratory species can
carry pollution over vast distances, they say. "It's a lesson to us in
how interconnected eco-regions can be, even when they may be separated
by thousands of miles," Nicholas Fisher, a professor of marine sciences
at Stony Brook University, New York, told CRS.
Fisher
and colleagues report their study in the journal Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences. They examined the muscle tissues of 15
Bluefin tuna (Thunnus orientalis) taken from waters off San Diego in
August 2011, just a few months after the accident at the Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear plant. These were animals whose parents would have
spawned in Japanese waters and spent one to two years locally before
heading to feeding grounds in the eastern Pacific.
All the fish examined in the study showed elevated levels of radioactive caesium - the isotopes 134 and 137.
Caesium-137
is present in seawater anyway as a result of the fallout from atomic
weapons testing, but the short, two-year half-life of caesium-134 means
the contamination can be tied directly to Fukushima. There is no other
explanation for the isotope's presence.
The measured
concentrations were about 10 times the total caesium radioactivity seen
in tuna specimens taken from before the accident. As a control, the team
also examined Yellowfin tuna, which are largely residential in the
eastern Pacific.
These animals showed no difference in their pre- or post-Fukushima concentrations.
The
research is likely to get attention because Bluefin tuna is an iconic
species and a highly valuable fishery - thousands of tonnes are landed
annually.
But consumers should have no health concerns about
eating California-caught tuna from last year, the team says. The levels
of radioactivity are well within permitted limits, and below those from
other radioisotopes that occur naturally in the environment, such as
potassium-40.
"The potassium was about 30 times higher than the
combined radio-caesium levels. If you calculate how much additional
radioactivity there is in the Pacific Bluefin tuna caught in California
relative to the natural background - it's about 3%," said Prof Fisher.
The
scientists even calculated how much radioactivity might have been
present in the fish before they swam across the Pacific (it would have
fallen over time) and figured it could have been 50% above background
levels; but, again, this would still have met the legal requirements for
safe consumption.
Tuna caught in the coming months will be
subjected to new tests. These animals would have spent much longer in
Japanese waters and so conceivably could have a very different pollution
load. The team also believes the investigation should be extended to
other migratory species that frequent Japanese waters.
Fukushima
pollution is potentially a very useful tool to trace the origin and
timing of animal movements. The ratio of caesium 134 to 137 could be
used like a clock to work out when and how long a particular migration
took. "This information might be useful in conservation efforts or in
managing fisheries," said Prof Fisher.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-18239107
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