Four-year decline in radioactive cesium transfer to perennial Gramineae candidate bioenergy crops in a field polluted by radioactive fallout from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant in 2011

2016 
The accident caused at the Tokyo Electric Power Company's Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant by the Great East Japan Earthquake of 11 March 2011 resulted in radioactive fallout over a wide area of eastern Japan. Production of bioenergy crops and their conversion to energy may be one way to resume agricultural production at an early date and to put renewable energy to practical use. We examined yearly changes in radioactive cesium concentrations in the harvested parts of six perennial Gramineae candidate bioenergy crops and the distribution of the cesium in plant organs and rhizosphere soil layers under no-till conditions in an experimental field 112 km from the nuclear power plant. Average radioactivity of the sum of cesium-134 and cesium-137 in the harvested parts (foliage) of the six bioenergy crops on the day of harvest declined considerably from 193.3 Bq kg−1 in 2011 to 31.6% of the 2011 level in 2012, 28.8% in 2013 and 28.7% in 2014. Radioactivity was higher in the underground plant parts (subterranean stem and root) than in the aboveground parts (foliage and stubble). In 2014, radioactivity in the untilled rhizosphere soil was higher in the shallow layer (0–5 cm from the soil surface) than in the deeper layers, indicating that rainfall and perennial bioenergy crop cultivation for more than 3 years had a limited effect on the soil distribution of the fallout. These results provide unique and specific information on radioactive cesium transfer to bioenergy crops and could help in the planning of feedstock supplies in radiation-polluted areas.
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