WASHINGTON:
Bluefin tuna may have transported
radioactive material from Japan's quake-struck Fukushima nuclear plant across
the Pacific Ocean to US shores, a study has found.
Researchers
found "modestly elevated levels" of two radioactive isotopes in 15
bluefin tuna caught off the coast of San Diego, California in August 2011,
according to the study published online Monday by the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
The
researchers said the elevated radioactivity posed no risk to public health as
the observed levels were more than an order of magnitude lower than the
Japanese safety limit and were lower than other naturally present isotopes.
The
study was authored by Daniel Madigan of California's Stanford University, and
Zofia Baumann and Nicholas Fisher, both from Stony Brook University in New
York.
The
study found slightly higher levels of radioactive cesium-134 and cesium-137 in
the 15 tuna, compared to bluefin tuna caught in the same area before the
Fukushima nuclear disaster and to yellowfin tuna -- which keep to the eastern
Pacific -- caught before or after the accident.
"These
findings indicate that Pacific bluefin tuna can rapidly transport radionuclides
from a point source in Japan to distant ecoregions and demonstrate the
importance of migratory animals as transport vectors," it said.
The
massive 9.0-magnitude earthquake and tsunami on March 11, 2011 killed thousands
of people and crippled the cooling systems at the Fukushima plant, causing
meltdowns in some of its reactors.
Radiation
leaked into the air, soil and sea around the plant, forcing tens of thousands
of people to evacuate their homes.
-
AFP/wm
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