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Article

Relationship of 137Cs with Fungal Spore Tracers in the Ambient Aerosols from Fukushima after the 2011 Nuclear Accident, East Japan

1
Chubu Institute for Advanced Studies, Chubu University, Kasugai 487-8501, Japan
2
Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Ibaraki University, Mito 310-8512, Japan
3
Division of Nuclear Engineering Science, Institute for Integrated Radiation and Nuclear Science, Kyoto University, Osaka 590-0494, Japan
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Atmosphere 2022, 13(3), 413; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos13030413
Submission received: 14 February 2022 / Revised: 27 February 2022 / Accepted: 28 February 2022 / Published: 3 March 2022
(This article belongs to the Section Aerosols)

Abstract

:
Even after 7 years of the nuclear accident that occurred in 2011 at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant (F1NPP), high levels of 137Cs have been detected in ambient aerosols from some polluted areas of Fukushima. Higher levels of radionuclides were often observed in the atmosphere during and after rain events. We presume that biological processes such as fungal activity associated with higher relative humidity may be involved with a possible emission of radioactivity to the atmosphere, which was originally emitted from the F1NPP accident and was deposited over the ground, forest, soil, etc. Here, we report, for the first time, relationships of 137Cs and organic tracers of fungal spores (i.e., arabitol, mannitol and trehalose) in the aerosol samples collected from Fukushima, Japan. Although we found twice-higher concentrations of 137Cs at nighttime than at daytime, fungal spore tracers did not show a consistent trend to 137Cs, that is, organic tracers at nighttime were similar with those at daytime or were even higher in daytime. This study has not clearly demonstrated that fungal spores are the important source of high levels of 137Cs at nighttime. The current unclear relationship is probably associated with the sampling strategy (four consecutive days with a sampling on/off program for day/nighttime samples) taken in this campaign, which may have caused a complicated meteorological situation.

1. Introduction

A severe nuclear accident (International Nuclear Event Scale: INES level 7 meltdown of three reactors) occurred in March 2011 at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant (F1NPP) operated by the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) a few days after the earthquake and subsequent tsunamis, causing serious contamination of radionuclides in the environments over the wide areas of eastern Japan, covering Fukushima and surrounding prefectures, and the adjacent western North Pacific. This nuclear accident was triggered by the attack of powerful tsunami waves that reached as high as 40 m and up to 10 km inland, following the strong earthquake (magnitude of 9.0) off the Pacific coast of northeast Japan (373 km northeast of Tokyo) that happened at 14:46 JST on 11 March 2011 [1,2,3,4,5]. The nuclear explosions at F1NPP (12–15 March) released significant amounts of radioactive elements to the atmosphere; 133Xe (11,000 PBq), 131I (160 PBq), 134Cs (18 PBq), 137Cs (15 PBq), which correspond to 1.69, 0.09, 0.38 and 0.18, respectively, of those from the Chernobyl nuclear accident in 1986 (P: 1015, https://www.env.go.jp/chemi/rhm/h29kisoshiryo/h29kiso-02-02-05.html, accessed on 26 July 2021).
Significant amounts of radionuclides have been deposited in the forest areas in Fukushima and its surroundings [6,7,8]. The contaminated surface soils have been removed from the human living areas by the Japanese Government, e.g., [9], but the majority of the areas’ forest soils have not been treated for soil removal processing. Radioactivities have been accumulated in the soils from Fukushima [10,11,12,13] and are remobilized/recycled among trees, plant litters and soil microorganisms such as fungi in the forest surface. In the forest soils, nuclear accident-emitted radiocesium is preserved in soils where particulate organic matter was deposited [10]. In the biogeochemical cycles of radioactive elements in the forest soil systems, fungal activities may play an important role in the emission of radiocesium from the soil surface to the atmosphere based on the study of the Chernobyl nuclear accident [14].
Igarashi et al. [15] reported the impacts from the F1NPP disaster over 3 years in Tsukuba, Ibaraki (ca. 170 km southwest from the TEPCO’s F1NPP). The monthly atmospheric deposition fluxes of 90Sr and 137Cs in March 2011 reached approximately 5 Bq/m2/month and 23 kBq/m2/month, respectively, which are 3–4 and 6–7 orders of magnitude higher than those before the accident, respectively. Even after 7 years from the nuclear accident, high levels of 137Cs have been found in ambient aerosols from some areas of Fukushima especially during rain events [16]. There are possible mechanisms for the high levels of 137Cs; e.g., re-suspension of dust particles from soil surface [17,18], or other pathways such as biological emission via fungal spore activity. Because the 137Cs concentrations are often higher during rain, the soil resuspension is not likely. However, its radioactivity levels are possibly associated with enhanced biological activity involved with rainfall or humidity.
We hypothesize that biological processes such as fungal activity may be associated with the soil-to-air emission of radionuclides deposited over the soil surface from the F1NPP accident [3,16,19]. Fungi can uptake various nutrient metal ions including potassium and radioactive Cs from soil surface using the fungal network system [20,21,22]. Fungi accumulate radioactive Cs due to the uptake similar to potassium, which is known because of the experiences of contaminations by weapon tests’ global fallout and because of the Chernobyl accident [14,23]. Cs and K are categorized as Group 1 in the periodic table of chemical elements, suggesting the similar chemical properties and thus similar behaviors in the environment. Cs is an analogue of K and is taken up by plants as a nutrient [24]. Although there is only a single data point, Yamaguchi et al. [25] reported a very high radioactive Cs concentration (629 Bq g−1 dry) in fungal spores from Fukushima. Fungal spores are also known to often dominate bioaerosol mass in the mid-latitudinal forest from East Asia [26,27].
Zhu et al. [28] reported that concentration levels of arabitol and mannitol (tracers of fungal spores) are higher at nighttime than at daytime in the Wakayama Research forest although pinic acid (photochemical oxidation product of α-pinene emitted from plants) showed an opposite trend. Their study, together with the high levels of 137Cs in Fukushima areas [15], stimulated our scientific interest in a possible biological emission of 137Cs to the atmosphere of Fukushima at nighttime and led us to a hypothesis of fungi as a possible emitter of 137Cs from the soil surface to the atmosphere. Sugar compounds in aerosols have been reported as the source of biological organic materials emitted from the ground surface (soil) to the atmosphere [29,30,31,32]. In particular, selected sugar compounds such as arabitol, mannitol and trehalose have been used as organic tracers to discuss the nighttime emission of fungal spores from the forest area in Japan [28]. However, there is no reported study so far for the simultaneous measurements of 137Cs and fungal spore tracers.
In this study, to examine the above hypothesis, we used ambient aerosols (day and night samples, separately) collected at Namie, Fukushima, Japan. Aerosol sampling was conducted during summer to autumn in 2017 for the measurements of 137Cs and sugar compounds including arabitol, mannitol and trehalose, which have been considered as fungal spore tracers in aerosol particles [29]. Here, we compare the concentration levels of sugar compounds with those of 137Cs to discuss the correlations among the organic tracers and radioactivity in the ambient aerosols collected from Fukushima and to better understand a possible biological emission of 137Cs from forests to the atmosphere.

2. Samples and Methods

The present sampling point (Namie-cho, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan) has been described in detail elsewhere [4,15,16,17,19]. Briefly, the site is located 8 km north-northwest of the F1NPP (see Figure 1 for the sampling site) and surrounded by forests in the evacuated zone; therefore, most of the forest areas remained contaminated. Major tree species in the forest are Japanese ceder (Cryptomeria japonica) and beech (Fugas crenata). The human activity in the area was rare except for a decontamination work. Ambient aerosol samples (total suspended particles, TSP) were collected during the period of 3 August to 26 October 2017 using pre-combusted (500 °C) quartz fiber filters (Pallflex, 2500QAT-UP, 20 × 25 cm, Avantor, Radnor, USA) and a high-volume air sampler (Shibata, Tokyo, Japan, HV-1000RW) at a flow rate of 1 m3 per min. We operated four air samplers that were placed on the ground of a school campus (1.2 m above the ground) with a time program to collect daytime (6:00–18:00) and nighttime (18:00–6:00) aerosols separately for four consecutive days (12 h × 4 d = 48 h). In total, 29 daytime (n = 15) and nighttime (n = 14) samples were collected. Blank filters (n = 4) were taken at the site without air sucking. The TSP samples were stored in a freezer at −20 °C until the analysis. Aliquots of aerosol samples were analyzed for the measurement of 137Cs using a Ge-semiconductor detector at the MRI laboratory (Meteorological Research Institute, Tsukuba, Japan) using the method of Igarashi et al. [15].
Figure 2 shows ambient temperature and relative humidity (RH) during the sampling periods. The ambient temperature ranged from 18 °C to 25 °C, with an average of 21 °C in daytime and from 13 °C to 21 °C with an average of 17 °C in nighttime. RH is clearly higher in nighttime (range: 80–100%, av. 96%) than daytime (73–98%, av. 85%) although the temperature showed an opposite trend. Figure 3 gives a wind direction/speed. The major winds came from the northeast and the east in nighttime and from the northeast in daytime.
For organics, aliquots of filter samples (10 cm2) were extracted with a dichloromethane/methanol (2:1) mixture (7 mL × 3) under ultrasonication for 10 min. The solvent extracts were passed through quartz wool packed in a Pasteur pipette, and then concentrated using a rotary evaporator under vacuum. The extracts were then reacted with 50 µL of N,O-bis-(trimethylsilyl)trifluoroacetamide (BSTFA) containing 1% trimethyl chloride and 10 µL pyridine at 70 °C for 3 h. During the reaction with BSTFA, OH-functional groups of sugar compounds including fungal spore tracers (arabitol, mannitol and trehalose) were converted to trimethylsilyl (TMS)-ether derivatives. The derivatives of sugar compounds were measured using gas chromatography (GC)/mass spectrometer (MS) (Hewlett-Packard model 6890 GC coupled to Hewlett-Packard model 5973 MSD, Agilent, Santa Clara, USA). More details of the analytical procedures can be found in previous publications [27,28,29]. The recoveries of organic tracers were 80–90%. Very small peaks of target compounds (<3% of real samples) were detected in the field blanks. However, no peaks were detected in the laboratory blank. The data were corrected for the field blanks.

3. Results and Discussion

The radioactivities of 137Cs were found to range from 0.07 to 0.27 (av. 0.17 ± 0.05) milli Bq (mBq) m−3 in daytime and 0.12 to 0.55 (av. 0.36 ± 0.10) mBq m−3 in nighttime during the campaign period (August to October 2017) at Namie, Fukushima (see Table 1). It is of interest to emphasize that the atmospheric 137Cs radioactivity at nighttime was twice as high as at daytime. These levels are significantly higher (>an order of magnitude) than the average concentration of 0.012 mBq m−3 reported in Tsukuba, Ibaraki (170 km southwest from the F1NPP) during March-August in 2014 [15]. This value is several orders of magnitude higher than those reported before the F1NPP disaster in the same site [15]. We confirmed that radioactivity levels of 137Cs in Namie, Fukushima were still high compared with those obtained six and a half years after the nuclear accident. Our finding that concentrations of 137Cs in aerosol samples at nighttime were twice as high as at daytime (on average 0.36 vs. 0.17 mBq m−3, respectively, see Table 1) raised a big question on the mechanism that controls the atmospheric levels of 137Cs in the forest area of Fukushima between daytime and nighttime. As a possible process, we examined atmospheric behavior of spores emitted from fungi that are grown on the forest surface by analyzing fungal spore tracers.
In the same aerosol samples, we detected homologues of sugar compounds including arabitol, fructose, glucose, mannitol, inositol, sucrose, and trehalose. Their GC/MS trace is shown in Figure 4; their concentrations are summarized in Table 1. We also detected levoglucosan, anhydrosugar that is not present in biomass but is produced by biomass burning via the thermal conversion of cellulose and hemicellulose [33]. Levoglucosan has often been used as a specific biomass burning tracer [30]. However, the concentrations of levoglucosan were significantly low in the present aerosol samples compared to previous studies from China and other Asian countries [29,34], suggesting that biomass burning is not the major source of organic aerosols containing sugar compounds in the ambient aerosols studied.
The sugar compounds detected in this study have been abundantly reported in ambient aerosols previously studied from different locations including forest, rural and marine sites [29,31,35,36]. We detected high levels of fungal tracers (i.e., arabitol, mannitol and trehalose) in the aerosol samples from Fukushima, together with other sugars (e.g., fructose, glucose, inositol, see Figure 4). However, we did not find a large difference between nighttime and daytime samples, e.g., arabitol levels were similar, trehalose was more abundant in nighttime but mannitol showed an opposite trend (Table 1). The results of concentration levels of fungal spore tracers were not consistent with 137Cs, which clearly showed the nighttime predominance (Table 1). Figure 5 presents timeseries plots of 137Cs and organic tracers for nighttime and daytime. There are no clear covariations between 137Cs and sugar compounds, including fungal tracers (arabitol, mannitol and trehalose). These results do not clearly support the fungal spore hypothesis.
Although correlation coefficients are relatively low (R2 = 0.012–0.056), we found positive correlations between fungal spore tracers and 137Cs in nighttime especially for trehalose and arabitol (Figure 6a,b). Meanwhile, there was no correlation between mannitol and 137Cs; the correlation coefficient was very low (0.0007, Figure 6c). We did not detect any positive correlations between the organic tracers and 137Cs for daytime samples (Figure 6d–f). The weak positive correlations between some fungal spore tracers and 137Cs in nighttime did support, at least partially, our working hypothesis, that is, soil-to-air emission of 137Cs via the fungal activity was likely in the sampling site of Fukushima. In contrast, we did not find any positive correlations of 137Cs with RH, ambient temperature and major carbohydrates for both daytime and nighttime. However, we detected negative correlations of RH with levoglucosan (R2 = 0.47) and sucrose (R2 = 0.44) at nighttime.
Fungi are known to have a sensitive strategy toward rain events and high relative humidity in terms of the emission of fungal spores. Zhu et al. [26] reported, based on the one-year observation of sugar alcohols at Cape Hedo, Okinawa, a remote island in the western North Pacific, that higher relative humidity (91% for weekly mean) resulted in more emissions of fungal spores under heavy rain and subsequent humid conditions. In our day/night sampling conditions, higher RH was always recorded at nighttime rather than daytime as discussed above. The enhanced nighttime RH could have promoted the activation of fungi, thus resulting in more emission of fungal spores to the air. We analyzed fungal spore samples collected near the sampling site and detected various sugar compounds in the water-extracts of the spore sample (Table 2). Although fungal spore tracers such as trehalose, arabitol and mannitol were detected, they did not show a clear positive relationship with 137Cs in the ambient aerosol samples collected at night as described above. We consider several reasons why the correlations between fungal tracers and 137Cs were not clearly observed, as discussed below.
In the present campaign, we collected the ambient aerosols for 4 consecutive days with an on/off program for daytime/nighttime aerosol samplers, during which there were variable changes in the meteorological parameters (e.g., ambient temperature, relative humidity, rain events). We initially expected to have a strong contrast of RH during the present day/nighttime intervals, which could largely affect fungal activity in the forest. Due to the 4-day sampling periods, the collected aerosol samples experienced complicated meteorological situations; thus the correlations between the organic tracers and 137Cs cannot be straightforward. We examined the relationship between organic tracers (arabitol and trehalose) and 137Cs in nighttime aerosols, with precipitation of >1 mm. The high levels of organic tracers and 137Cs were not consistent with the rain events, that is, some data points with a rain event showed high levels of organic tracers and 137Cs in aerosols, however, not always in this campaign.
Based on these results, we considered that the sampling periods of four days are too long to have a snap-shot of good correlation between fungal spore tracers and 137Cs. Hence, we believe that a shorter sampling period is needed to better understand the emission processes of 137Cs together with fungal spores whose biological activities are mainly involved with meteorology-oriented parameters to avoid the complicated meteorological situations that may happen during long sampling periods of four days. We suspect that the sampling strategies used in this campaign may have caused an obscure observation on the hypothesis of fungal spores as an emitter of 137Cs. We plan to collect day/night samples of ambient aerosols from Fukushima with 12 h periods to better support our fungal spore hypothesis for the emission of 137Cs in the Fukushima area.

4. Summary and Conclusions

Here, we report, for the first time, on the simultaneous measurements of radioactive 137Cs and organic tracers of fungal spores in ambient aerosols from Fukushima, East Japan, to evaluate the potential importance of fungi to the soil-to-air emission of 137Cs originally emitted from the nuclear accident in 2011. Based on day/night (four days) data of ambient aerosols, we discussed a hypothetical mechanism of soil-to-air emission of radiocesium via fungal spore activity. We found that the levels of radioactive 137Cs in the ambient aerosols were twice as high at nighttime as at daytime. Although we could not clearly detect a good correlation between the 137Cs and fungal spore tracers partly due to the sampling strategy taken in this campaign (four-day sampling with day/night on/off program), we found a weak correlation between fungal tracers (arabitol and trehalose) with 137Cs, partially supporting the fungal spore hypothesis as an emission source of radio 137Cs. However, the correlation coefficients were much smaller than we initially expected. During the rather long time periods of sampling, we may have missed the opportunity to catch a clear correlation between 137Cs and fungal spore tracers, probably due to the complicated meteorological conditions that the aerosols experienced during the 4-day sample collection periods. We need to use a sampling strategy for shorter time periods for daytime and nighttime sampling in the future to re-examine the hypothesis of fungal spores as coemitter of 137Cs from the soil surface to the atmosphere.

Author Contributions

The research plan was made by K.K. (Kimitaka Kawamura), K.K. (Kazuyuki Kita) and Y.I. Radio analyses and organic tracer analyses were performed by N.H. and B.K., respectively. The draft was prepared by K.K. (Kimitaka Kawamura) and all the coauthors contributed to improve the manuscript. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This study was in part funded by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS, Tokyo, Japan) through grant-in-aid Nos. 18K18791, 17H01478, 17H01873 and 18H03385.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

All the data in this paper are available within the manuscript.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Kohtaro Minami, graduate student of Ibaraki University, Mito, Japan, for his help in aerosol sampling and in fungal spore sampling. We also appreciate the review and suggestions made by Chunmao Zhu.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Map of sampling site (Namie-cho) and Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant (F1NPP) in Fukushima, Japan (from Google map) with a map of the FINPP disaster. Original map was downloaded from Google map.
Figure 1. Map of sampling site (Namie-cho) and Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant (F1NPP) in Fukushima, Japan (from Google map) with a map of the FINPP disaster. Original map was downloaded from Google map.
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Figure 2. Ambient temperature and relative humidity during (a,c) nighttime and (b,d) daytime. The original meteorological data were collected at the sampling site.
Figure 2. Ambient temperature and relative humidity during (a,c) nighttime and (b,d) daytime. The original meteorological data were collected at the sampling site.
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Figure 3. Relative frequency of wind directions at Namie-cho in Fukushima during (a) nighttime and (b) daytime during the sampling campaign (August to October 2017). Color code labels (0–2, 2–4, etc.) indicate the recorded wind speed in m/s. The meteorological data were obtained from the Japan Meteorological Agency, Tsukuba, Japan.
Figure 3. Relative frequency of wind directions at Namie-cho in Fukushima during (a) nighttime and (b) daytime during the sampling campaign (August to October 2017). Color code labels (0–2, 2–4, etc.) indicate the recorded wind speed in m/s. The meteorological data were obtained from the Japan Meteorological Agency, Tsukuba, Japan.
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Figure 4. Typical GC/MS trace (TIC chromatogram) of sugar compounds isolated from nighttime aerosol sample (sampling dates, 9 to 13 September 2017) from Namie-cho, Fukushima.
Figure 4. Typical GC/MS trace (TIC chromatogram) of sugar compounds isolated from nighttime aerosol sample (sampling dates, 9 to 13 September 2017) from Namie-cho, Fukushima.
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Figure 5. Time series plots of 137Cs and organic tracers in the ambient aerosols collected from Fukushima during (ag) night- and (hn) daytime periods. The sampling durations were four days. The dates mean the first day of the sampling periods. The data of 8 August are not shown due to the missing of 137Cs data.
Figure 5. Time series plots of 137Cs and organic tracers in the ambient aerosols collected from Fukushima during (ag) night- and (hn) daytime periods. The sampling durations were four days. The dates mean the first day of the sampling periods. The data of 8 August are not shown due to the missing of 137Cs data.
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Figure 6. Correlations between organic tracers (arabitol, mannitol and trehalose) and 137Cs in atmospheric aerosols collected in (ac) night- and (df) daytime periods from Fukushima, Japan.
Figure 6. Correlations between organic tracers (arabitol, mannitol and trehalose) and 137Cs in atmospheric aerosols collected in (ac) night- and (df) daytime periods from Fukushima, Japan.
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Table 1. Summary of concentrations of 137Cs and sugar compounds in Fukushima aerosols (August to October, 2017).
Table 1. Summary of concentrations of 137Cs and sugar compounds in Fukushima aerosols (August to October, 2017).
(milli Bq m−3) (ng m−3)
137 CsLevoglucosanArabitolFructose GlucoseMannitolInositolSucroseTrehalose
Nighttime (n = 15)
Av.0.362.9541618824.20.3448
Stdev.0.105.0322217656.10.3782
Min.0.120.00140.610.81170.420.001.0
Max.0.55171248866236221.3316
Daytime (n = 14)
Av.0.173.0534040103120.5240
Stdev.0.054.6627256206250.4647
Min.0.070.00.070.00.00.00.00.00.0
Max.0.2716260254215802731.4176
Table 2. Sugar compounds detected in water-extracts from fungal spore (171012 Fungi, Fukushima).
Table 2. Sugar compounds detected in water-extracts from fungal spore (171012 Fungi, Fukushima).
Sugar CompoundsConcentration (ng/mL)
arabitol88.2
α-fructose9.4
α-glucose67.5
mannitol43.4
inositol44
sucrose56.4
trehalose17.8
Spores released from a few mushrooms of the genus Suillus, which grew in grove of Japanese red pine adjacent to the sampling site, were collected on a quartz-fibre filter sheet (Pallflex, 2500QAT-UP, Avantor, Radnor, PA, USA) in a laboratory. Some of the collected spores were put into 1 mL of phosphate-buffered saline solution (0.0067 M, GE Healthcare life science) with 1 mL of Tween 20 (Kanto Kagaku, Tokyo, Japan) and were mixed well. Number density of spores in this solution was measured with a microscope; 137Cs radioactivity of this solution was measured with a Ge detector in MRI. Median radioactivity per spore was estimated as 3.7 ± 0.6 × 10−9 (Bq/spore). After these measurements, spores were filtered and stored in a freezer at −20 °C prior to chemical analysis.
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Kawamura, K.; Kunwar, B.; Kita, K.; Hayashi, N.; Igarashi, Y. Relationship of 137Cs with Fungal Spore Tracers in the Ambient Aerosols from Fukushima after the 2011 Nuclear Accident, East Japan. Atmosphere 2022, 13, 413. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos13030413

AMA Style

Kawamura K, Kunwar B, Kita K, Hayashi N, Igarashi Y. Relationship of 137Cs with Fungal Spore Tracers in the Ambient Aerosols from Fukushima after the 2011 Nuclear Accident, East Japan. Atmosphere. 2022; 13(3):413. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos13030413

Chicago/Turabian Style

Kawamura, Kimitaka, Bhagawati Kunwar, Kazuyuki Kita, Naho Hayashi, and Yasuhito Igarashi. 2022. "Relationship of 137Cs with Fungal Spore Tracers in the Ambient Aerosols from Fukushima after the 2011 Nuclear Accident, East Japan" Atmosphere 13, no. 3: 413. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos13030413

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