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Oral presentation

Environmental dynamics of radiocaesium and its outflow flux in the mountain forest; Abukuma Mountains, Fukushima

Niizato, Tadafumi; Abe, Hironobu; Ishii, Yasuo; Watanabe, Takayoshi; Mitachi, Katsuaki

no journal, , 

Environmental dynamics of radiocaesium and its outflow flux are crusial issues for the remediation of the Fukushima environment affected by contamination of the fall out of Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant Accident. This paper presents the current status of field investigation and monitoring related to the dynamics and outflow flux of radiocaesium in the mountation forest, Abukuma Mountains, Fukushima, Japan.

Oral presentation

Temporal changes of radiocesium outflow in mountainous forest of the Abukuma Mountains, Fukushima

Niizato, Tadafumi; Abe, Hironobu; Mitachi, Katsuaki; Ishii, Yasuo; Sasaki, Yoshito; Watanabe, Takayoshi; Kitamura, Akihiro; Yamaguchi, Masaaki

no journal, , 

This paper presents outflow characteristics of Cs-137 in mountainous forest of the Abukuma Mountains, Fukushima, during 2013-2014. Cs-137 deposition via throughfall, stemflow, and litterfall processes was estimated to be on the order of 10$$^{3}$$ Bq m$$^{-2}$$, and the outflow of Cs-137 via surface washoff was estimated to be on the order of 10$$^{2}$$ Bq m$$^{-2}$$ from April 2013 to December 2014 in the experimental plots installed in deciduous broad-leaved and cedar forests in the Abukuma Mountains. Cs-137 inventories of forest soil down to a level of 1 cm were decreasing in ridge and valley-bottom soil during the period from December 2012 to October 2014. The inventories in mountain slope showed both decreasing and increasing tendencies because of the heterogeneous transportation of Cs-137 via surface washoff on the slope. The results of outflow rate simulations using the SACT model developed in the Japan Atomic Energy Agency indicate decreasing tendency accompanied with a deeper penetration of Cs-137 into soil profile. Thus, the forest floor in the mountainous forest seems to be a sink of radiocesium contamination rather than a source for the contamination of the other ecosystems.

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