Popis: |
Some of the highest recordings of radioactive fallout from the Chernobyl accident in Norway were found in the south-eastern Oppland and Hedmark counties. Cesium content and decay rates were followed in populations of brown trout and Arctic char in Lake Atnsjoen over the years 1986–1995. These results were compared with samples for adjacent lakes to test for between-lake variabilities within the same region. The data on brown trout was compared with samples from a wider region, where more than 1800 individual samples of brown trout were collected from nearly 100 localities. Back-calculated initial activity per 1 January 1987 showed a strong regional and within-lake variability for these localities, ranging from 437 to 18000 Bq kg−1 (average: 2416 Bq kg−1), while trout and char from Atnsjoen had initial activities of 1259 and 1122 Bq kg−1, respectively. Most of the other populations from the Atna region also had initial activities below the average (around 2000 Bq kg−1). Ecological half-life for both brown trout and Artic char in lake Atnsjoen was close to 1.7 years (corresponding to a decay rate of 0.4 year), which was consistently lower than the 2.5 years average for the entire lake data set. Decay constants from linear regressions of total decay over time ranged from 0.15 to 0.28. For trout populations, a positive correlation was found between initial load and decay constants. Although trout and char clearly differ in their diet, no consistent differences were recorded in initial activities or decay rates for these two species in the Atna area. |