Abstract Among the released radionuclides from nuclear power plants and radioactive waste repositories, 14 C is of great importance. Continuous discharges of 14 C from nuclear industries, the risk of uncontrolled releases, and possible leaking from facilities may cause a threat to the biosphere. Because of high mobility and a long half-life of 14 C, it has great potential to be released into aquatic ecosystems and to be assimilated by aquatic plants. However, the amount of 14 C incorporated into organic matter and hydrophytes is largely unknown. In this study, the uptake of carbon from sediment into aquatic plants was investigated in a microcosm experiment. The study was carried out based on the natural difference in the isotopic signature of 14 C between the 8000-year-old peat and more enriched sources (water and atmosphere). The two-pool isotope mixing model was applied to determine the relative contribution of each source (sediment vs. air/water) to the hydrophytes. The results indicated the highest contribution of sediment-derived carbon to the free-floating Lemna minor (up to 60%), followed by submerged Littorella uniflora (15–17%) and the emergent species, Stachys palustris and Lysimachia nummularia (up to 10%). Despite the contribution of sediment-derived C to their C source, the hydrophytes incorporated less than 2% of their total C from sediment. The results also indicated the importance of floating plants in more efficient uptake of sediment-derived C available in water column or the air. Furthermore, no significant difference was found in the transfer of sediment-derived C between the roots and the leaves within the species.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Majlesi et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6988277b0fc35cd7a884635c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00411-026-01199-7
Soroush Majlesi
University of Helsinki
Safi Ullah
University of Eastern Finland
Zahra Shirani
University of Eastern Finland
Radiation and Environmental Biophysics
University of Helsinki
University of Eastern Finland
Helsinki Institute of Physics
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...