Artículos de revistas
Artificial and natural radioactivity in edible mushrooms from Sao Paulo, Brazil
Fecha
2012-07-04Registro en:
Journal of Environmental Radioactivity, n. 113, p. 150- 154, 2012
Autor
de Castro, L.P.
Maihara, V.A.
Silva, P.S.C.
Figueira, Rubens Cesar Lopes
Institución
Resumen
Environmental biomonitoring has demonstrated that organisms such as crustaceans, fish and mushrooms are useful to evaluate and monitor both ecosystem contamination and quality. Particularly, some mushroom species have a high capacity to retain radionuclides and some toxic elements from the soil and the air. The potential of mushrooms to accumulate radionuclides in their fruit-bodies has been well documented. However, there are no studies that determine natural and artificial radionuclide composition in edible mushrooms, in Brazil. Artificial (137Cs) and natural radioactivity (40K, 226Ra, 228Ra) were
determined in 17 mushroom samples from 3 commercialized edible mushroom species. The edible mushrooms collected were Agaricus sp., Pleurotus sp. and Lentinula sp. species. The activity measurements were carried out by gamma spectrometry. The levels of 137Cs varied from 1.45 0.04 to 10.6 0.3 Bq kg 1, 40K levels varied from 461 2 to 1535 10 Bq kg 1, 226Ra levels varied from 14 3 to 66 12 Bq kg 1 and 228Ra levels varied from 6.2 0.2 to 54.2 1.7 Bq kg 1. 137Cs levels in Brazilian mushrooms are in accordance with the radioactive fallout in the Southern Hemisphere. The artificial and natural activities determined in this study were found to be below the maximum permissible levels as
established by national legislation. Thus, these mushroom species can be normally consumed by the population without any apparent risks to human health.