InFORMative Science: Monitoring the arrival of Fukushima contamination on the Canadian coast
The Integrated Fukushima Ocean Radionuclide Monitoring (InFORM) network is a partnership between academic, government, private organizations, and citizen scientists to monitor the arrival of Fukushima-derived radiation, cesium-134 (t1/2 = ~2 years), cesium-137 (t1/2 = ~30 years) in Canadian waters....
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ftwestwashington:oai:cedar.wwu.edu:ssec-2102 2023-05-15T15:16:11+02:00 InFORMative Science: Monitoring the arrival of Fukushima contamination on the Canadian coast Kellogg, Jonathan P Cullen, Jay T Buesseler, Ken O Chen, Jing Cornett, Jack Frank, Erica MacDonald, Cole McKay, Lauren Mercier, Jean-Francois Purdon, Kathryn Reynolds, Susan Smith, John N Trudel, Marc Jean 2016-01-01T08:00:00Z https://cedar.wwu.edu/ssec/2016ssec/fate_and_effects_of_pollutants/50 English eng Western CEDAR https://cedar.wwu.edu/ssec/2016ssec/fate_and_effects_of_pollutants/50 This resource is displayed for educational purposes only and may be subject to U.S. and international copyright laws. For more information about rights or obtaining copies of this resource, please contact University Archives, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA 98225-9103, USA (360-650-7534; heritage.resources@wwu.edu) and refer to the collection name and identifier. Any materials cited must be attributed to the Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference Records, University Archives, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University. Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference Fresh Water Studies Life Sciences Marine Biology Natural Resources and Conservation text 2016 ftwestwashington 2022-09-14T05:59:50Z The Integrated Fukushima Ocean Radionuclide Monitoring (InFORM) network is a partnership between academic, government, private organizations, and citizen scientists to monitor the arrival of Fukushima-derived radiation, cesium-134 (t1/2 = ~2 years), cesium-137 (t1/2 = ~30 years) in Canadian waters. In response to public demand, monitoring began in the fall of 2014, when models predicted the arrival of radionuclide contamination from the 2011 Fukushima nuclear accident. Monitoring efforts will capture the peak of the radionuclide contamination, predicted in 2016-2017 for our waters, utilizing a network of coastal, oceanic, and biotic sampling. Seawater samples are collected monthly by dedicated citizen scientists in 16 of British Columbia’s coastal communities. Understanding oceanic conditions, through samples collected on research cruises to the NE Pacific (biannual) and the Arctic Ocean (annual), serves as a forecast for the coast. In addition, salmon from each of British Columbia’s major salmon runs are sampled each summer to assess human and ecosystem health risks due to bioaccumulation of Fukushima derived contamination. To date, monitoring has shown levels of radionuclide activity (~10 Bq m-3 in the central NE Pacific) are well below Canadian safe drinking water standards (10,000 Bq m-3). Similarly, radionuclide levels in salmon from 2014 were below the minimum detectable concentration for 134Cs and very low (0.2 Bq kg-1 for 137Cs) compared to safety standards (1,000 Bq kg-1). Through an active, and multi-faceted, outreach campaign these results are providing quality information to the public regarding the accident’s environmental effects here in North America. While contamination levels continue to be below levels that are known to be hazardous to human or ecosystem health, InFORM monitoring is finding levels slightly elevated relative to numerical model predictions. These data will assist in refining models and our understanding of upper-ocean dynamics. Text Arctic Arctic Ocean Western Washington University: CEDAR (Contributing to Education through Digital Access to Research) Arctic Arctic Ocean Fukushima Pacific |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
Western Washington University: CEDAR (Contributing to Education through Digital Access to Research) |
op_collection_id |
ftwestwashington |
language |
English |
topic |
Fresh Water Studies Life Sciences Marine Biology Natural Resources and Conservation |
spellingShingle |
Fresh Water Studies Life Sciences Marine Biology Natural Resources and Conservation Kellogg, Jonathan P Cullen, Jay T Buesseler, Ken O Chen, Jing Cornett, Jack Frank, Erica MacDonald, Cole McKay, Lauren Mercier, Jean-Francois Purdon, Kathryn Reynolds, Susan Smith, John N Trudel, Marc Jean InFORMative Science: Monitoring the arrival of Fukushima contamination on the Canadian coast |
topic_facet |
Fresh Water Studies Life Sciences Marine Biology Natural Resources and Conservation |
description |
The Integrated Fukushima Ocean Radionuclide Monitoring (InFORM) network is a partnership between academic, government, private organizations, and citizen scientists to monitor the arrival of Fukushima-derived radiation, cesium-134 (t1/2 = ~2 years), cesium-137 (t1/2 = ~30 years) in Canadian waters. In response to public demand, monitoring began in the fall of 2014, when models predicted the arrival of radionuclide contamination from the 2011 Fukushima nuclear accident. Monitoring efforts will capture the peak of the radionuclide contamination, predicted in 2016-2017 for our waters, utilizing a network of coastal, oceanic, and biotic sampling. Seawater samples are collected monthly by dedicated citizen scientists in 16 of British Columbia’s coastal communities. Understanding oceanic conditions, through samples collected on research cruises to the NE Pacific (biannual) and the Arctic Ocean (annual), serves as a forecast for the coast. In addition, salmon from each of British Columbia’s major salmon runs are sampled each summer to assess human and ecosystem health risks due to bioaccumulation of Fukushima derived contamination. To date, monitoring has shown levels of radionuclide activity (~10 Bq m-3 in the central NE Pacific) are well below Canadian safe drinking water standards (10,000 Bq m-3). Similarly, radionuclide levels in salmon from 2014 were below the minimum detectable concentration for 134Cs and very low (0.2 Bq kg-1 for 137Cs) compared to safety standards (1,000 Bq kg-1). Through an active, and multi-faceted, outreach campaign these results are providing quality information to the public regarding the accident’s environmental effects here in North America. While contamination levels continue to be below levels that are known to be hazardous to human or ecosystem health, InFORM monitoring is finding levels slightly elevated relative to numerical model predictions. These data will assist in refining models and our understanding of upper-ocean dynamics. |
format |
Text |
author |
Kellogg, Jonathan P Cullen, Jay T Buesseler, Ken O Chen, Jing Cornett, Jack Frank, Erica MacDonald, Cole McKay, Lauren Mercier, Jean-Francois Purdon, Kathryn Reynolds, Susan Smith, John N Trudel, Marc Jean |
author_facet |
Kellogg, Jonathan P Cullen, Jay T Buesseler, Ken O Chen, Jing Cornett, Jack Frank, Erica MacDonald, Cole McKay, Lauren Mercier, Jean-Francois Purdon, Kathryn Reynolds, Susan Smith, John N Trudel, Marc Jean |
author_sort |
Kellogg, Jonathan P |
title |
InFORMative Science: Monitoring the arrival of Fukushima contamination on the Canadian coast |
title_short |
InFORMative Science: Monitoring the arrival of Fukushima contamination on the Canadian coast |
title_full |
InFORMative Science: Monitoring the arrival of Fukushima contamination on the Canadian coast |
title_fullStr |
InFORMative Science: Monitoring the arrival of Fukushima contamination on the Canadian coast |
title_full_unstemmed |
InFORMative Science: Monitoring the arrival of Fukushima contamination on the Canadian coast |
title_sort |
informative science: monitoring the arrival of fukushima contamination on the canadian coast |
publisher |
Western CEDAR |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
https://cedar.wwu.edu/ssec/2016ssec/fate_and_effects_of_pollutants/50 |
geographic |
Arctic Arctic Ocean Fukushima Pacific |
geographic_facet |
Arctic Arctic Ocean Fukushima Pacific |
genre |
Arctic Arctic Ocean |
genre_facet |
Arctic Arctic Ocean |
op_source |
Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference |
op_relation |
https://cedar.wwu.edu/ssec/2016ssec/fate_and_effects_of_pollutants/50 |
op_rights |
This resource is displayed for educational purposes only and may be subject to U.S. and international copyright laws. For more information about rights or obtaining copies of this resource, please contact University Archives, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA 98225-9103, USA (360-650-7534; heritage.resources@wwu.edu) and refer to the collection name and identifier. Any materials cited must be attributed to the Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference Records, University Archives, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University. |
_version_ |
1766346478774648832 |