23 results on '"Sergey Fesenko"'
Search Results
2. Review of Russian language studies on radionuclide behaviour in agricultural animals: transfer to animal tissues
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N. Isamov, Sergey Fesenko, Sanzharova Ni, Brenda J. Howard, and Claire M. Wells
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Russian language ,Light nucleus ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,English language ,010501 environmental sciences ,Biology ,01 natural sciences ,Ecology and Environment ,Russia ,Radiation Monitoring ,Environmental health ,Animals ,Soil Pollutants, Radioactive ,Environmental Chemistry ,Waste Management and Disposal ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Radioisotopes ,Radionuclide ,business.industry ,Radiation dose ,General Medicine ,Pollution ,Agriculture ,Animals, Domestic ,Soviet union ,business - Abstract
Data on radionuclide transfer to animals from research performed in the former Soviet Union were reviewed to collate transfer coefficient values (Ff) to animal tissues such as liver, kidney and bone, but not muscle which has previously been reported. The derived values were compared with selected data published in the English language literature. The new data are mainly for 90Sr and 137Cs, although some data were also provided for 3H, 54Mn, 59Fe, 60Co, 22Na 65Zn, 131I and U. The Russian language data may provide a basis for better informed evaluation of radiation dose from the consumption of such animal products, which can form important components of the diet in some countries.
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- 2018
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3. Gastrointestinal fractional absorption of radionuclides in adult domestic ruminants
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Sergey Fesenko, Nicholas A. Beresford, Catherine L. Barnett, and Brenda J. Howard
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Veterinary medicine ,International Cooperation ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Ruminant animal ,Biology ,Gastrointestinal absorption ,Iodine Radioisotopes ,Metals, Heavy ,Animals ,Humans ,Environmental Chemistry ,Radionuclide imaging ,Radionuclide Imaging ,Absorption (electromagnetic radiation) ,Food Contamination, Radioactive ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Radioisotopes ,Radionuclide ,Sheep ,Apparent absorption ,Goats ,Heavy metals ,Ruminants ,General Medicine ,Pollution ,Gastrointestinal Tract ,Cesium Radioisotopes ,Animals, Domestic ,Environmental chemistry ,Strontium Radioisotopes ,Cattle ,Digestive tract - Abstract
Information has been complied on the fractional absorption of a range of radionuclides by adult domestic ruminants. Critical analysis of these data has enabled the derivation of recommended values for fractional absorption which will form part of the new handbook of parameter values for the prediction of radionuclide transfer in terrestrial and freshwater environments to be published by the International Atomic Energy Agency. Whilst most data considered were for caesium, strontium and iodine, values for 23 other radionuclides are also given. The recommended fractional absorption values are presented here, together with descriptions of the literature used to derive them. The values for domestic ruminants are compared with those derived by the International Commission for Radiological Protection for adult humans.
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- 2009
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4. Rural areas affected by the Chernobyl accident: Radiation exposure and remediation strategies
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Y.M. Zhuchenko, N. Lazarev, Sanzharova Ni, Sergey Fesenko, I. Bogdevitch, N. Isamov, A. Ulanovsky, N. Grebenshikova, Valery Kashparov, Peter Jacob, Marina Zhurba, and Panov Av
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Rural Population ,Time Factors ,Environmental Engineering ,Environmental remediation ,Population ,Radiation Dosage ,Chernobyl Nuclear Accident ,Russia ,Radiation Monitoring ,Environmental protection ,Human settlement ,Animals ,Humans ,Soil Pollutants, Radioactive ,Environmental Chemistry ,education ,Food Contamination, Radioactive ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Environmental Restoration and Remediation ,education.field_of_study ,Geography ,Agriculture ,Environmental Exposure ,Environmental exposure ,Collective dose ,Pollution ,Remedial action ,Environmental science ,Rural area ,Algorithms - Abstract
Main objectives of the present work were to develop an internationally agreed methodology for deriving optimized remediation strategies in rural areas that are still affected by the Chernobyl accident, and to give an overview of the radiological situation in the three affected countries, Belarus, Russia and Ukraine. Study settlements were defined by having in 2004 less than 10,000 inhabitants and official dose estimates exceeding 1 mSv. Data on population, current farming practices, contamination of soils and foodstuffs, and remedial actions previously applied were collected for each of such 541 study settlements. Calculations of the annual effective dose from internal radiation were validated with extensive data sets on whole body counter measurements. According to our calculations for 2004, in 290 of the study settlements the effective dose exceeded 1 mSv, and the collective dose in these settlements amounted to about 66 person-Sv. Six remedial actions were considered: radical improvement of grassland, application of ferrocyn to cows, feeding pigs with uncontaminated fodder before slaughter, application of mineral fertilizers for potato fields, information campaign on contaminated forest produce, and replacement of contaminated soil in populated areas by uncontaminated soil. Side effects of the remedial actions were quantified by a 'degree of acceptability'. Results are presented for two remediation strategies, namely, Strategy 1, in which the degree of acceptability was given a priority, and Remediation Strategy 2, in which remedial actions were chosen according to lowest costs per averted dose only. Results are highly country-specific varying from preference for soil replacement in populated areas in Belarus to preference for application of ferrocyn to cows in Ukraine. Remedial actions in 2010 can avert a large collective dose of about 150 person-Sv (including averted doses, which would be received in the following years). Nevertheless, the number of inhabitants in Belarusian and Russian settlements with annual doses exceeding 1 mSv remains large. Compared to international values for the cost-effectiveness of actions to reduce occupational exposures, the recommended remediation strategies for rural areas affected by the Chernobyl accident are quite cost-effective (about 20 keuro/person-Sv).
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- 2009
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5. Quantifying the transfer of radionuclides to food products from domestic farm animals
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Sergey Fesenko, Nicholas A. Beresford, Catherine L. Barnett, and Brenda J. Howard
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Radioisotopes ,Russian language ,Radionuclide ,Meat ,Food industry ,business.industry ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Dietary intake ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Pollution ,Biotechnology ,Milk ,Nutrient ,Domestic animal ,Animals, Domestic ,Transfer (computing) ,Food products ,Statistics ,Animals ,Humans ,Environmental Chemistry ,business ,Food Contamination, Radioactive ,Waste Management and Disposal - Abstract
Databases have been compiled to derive parameter values relevant to the transfer of radionuclides from feedstuffs to domestic animal products to provide a revision to the IAEA Handbook on transfer parameters TRS 364. Significant new data inputs have been incorporated into the databases from an extensive review of Russian language information and inclusion of data published since the early 1990s. Fractional gastrointestinal absorption in adult ruminants presented in the revised handbook are generally similar to those recommended for adult humans by the ICRP. Transfer coefficient values are presented in the handbook for a range of radionuclides to farm animal products. For most animal products, transfer coefficient values for elements additional to those in TRS 364 are provided although many data gaps remain. Transfer coefficients generally vary between species with larger species having lower values than smaller species. It has been suggested that the difference is partly due to the inclusion of dietary dry matter intake in the estimation of transfer coefficient and that whilst dietary intake increases with size nutrient concentrations do not. An alternative approach to quantifying transfer by using concentration ratios (CR), which do not consider dietary intake, has been evaluated. CR values compiled for the handbook vary considerably less between species than transfer coefficient values. The advantage of the CR approach is that values derived for one species could be applied to species for which there are no data. However, transfer coefficients will continue to be used as few studies currently report CR values or give data from which they can be estimated.
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- 2009
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6. Review of Russian language studies on radionuclide behaviour in agricultural animals: 3. Transfer to muscle
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Sergey Fesenko, Catherine L. Barnett, Brenda J. Howard, Nicholas A. Beresford, Sanzharova Ni, N. Isamov, and Gabriele Voigt
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Russian language ,Veterinary medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Meat ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Nuclear engineering ,Russia ,Radioecology ,Radiation Monitoring ,Transfer (computing) ,Radioactive contamination ,medicine ,Animals ,Environmental Chemistry ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Language ,Radioisotopes ,Radionuclide ,Chemistry ,Muscles ,General Medicine ,Pollution ,Biological materials ,Domestic animal ,Animals, Domestic ,Cattle ,Rabbits ,Periodicals as Topic ,Radioactive Hazard Release ,Radiation Accidents ,USSR - Abstract
Over 150 publications reporting studies conducted in the former USSR were reviewed to provide transfer coefficients (F(f)) to the muscle of domestic animals from experiments using chronic administration, often for long timescales in large scale experiments. Only a few of these studies were made available in the English language literature or taken into account in international reviews. The values derived have been compared with expected values reported by the IAEA's Handbook of parameter values for the prediction of radionuclide transfer in temperate environments (TRS 364) where possible. The information presented here has been used in the current updating of parameters recommended for environmental assessments by the IAEA. Many of the reported values are for Sr due to the Mayak accident and Cs due to the Chernobyl accident. Nevertheless, the reported data for a wide range of radionuclides, in particular for Ru, Sb, and Zn markedly improve the extent of available data.
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- 2009
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7. Effects of non-human species irradiation after the Chernobyl NPP accident
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R.M. Alexakhin, Sergey Fesenko, and Stanislav A. Geras’kin
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lcsh:GE1-350 ,Mutation rate ,Ecology ,Biodiversity ,Biota ,Environmental exposure ,Environmental Exposure ,Biology ,Plants ,Chernobyl Nuclear Accident ,Habitat ,Radiation, Ionizing ,Radioactive contamination ,Vertebrates ,Animals ,Ecosystem ,lcsh:Environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science ,Radioactive Pollutants - Abstract
The area affected by the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant accident in 1986 has become a unique test site where long-term ecological and biological consequences of a drastic change in a range of environmental factors as well as trends and intensity of selection are studied in natural settings. The consequences of the Chernobyl accident for biota varied from an enhanced rate of mutagenesis to damage at the ecosystem level. The review comprehensively brings together key data of the long-term studies of biological effects in plants and animals inhabiting over 20 years the Chernobyl NPP zone. The severity of radiation effects was strongly dependent on the dose received in the early period after the accident. The most exposed phytocenoses and soil animals' communities exhibited dose dependent alterations in the species composition and reduction in biological diversity. On the other hand, no decrease in numbers or taxonomic diversity of small mammals even in the most radioactive habitat was shown. In a majority of the studies, in both plant and animal populations from the Chernobyl zone, in the first years after the accident high increases in mutation rates were documented. In most cases the dose–effect relationships were nonlinear and the mutation rates per unit dose were higher at low doses and dose rates. In subsequent years a decline in the radiation background rate occurred faster than reduction in the mutation rate. Plant and animal populations have shown signs of adaptation to chronic exposure. In adaptation to the enhanced level of exposure an essential role of epigenetic mechanisms of gene expression regulation was shown. Based on the Chernobyl NPP accident studies, in the present review attempts were made to assess minimum doses at which ecological and biological effects were observed. Keywords: Chernobyl NPP accident, Radioactive contamination, Doses, Ecological and biological effects
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- 2008
8. An extended critical review of twenty years of countermeasures used in agriculture after the Chernobyl accident
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Valery Kashparov, Brenda J. Howard, Sergey Fesenko, Natalia I. Sanzharova, R.M. Alexakhin, Gabriele Voigt, Mikhail Balonov, Iossif M. Bogdevitch, Yury M. Zhuchenka, and Panov Av
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Environmental Engineering ,Republic of Belarus ,Best practice ,Decision Making ,Russia ,Accident (fallacy) ,Radiation Protection ,Waste Management ,Radiation Monitoring ,Environmental protection ,Radioactive contamination ,Humans ,Soil Pollutants, Radioactive ,Environmental Chemistry ,Food Contamination, Radioactive ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Environmental planning ,Land use ,business.industry ,Agriculture ,Collective dose ,Pollution ,Countermeasure ,Geography ,Chernobyl Nuclear Accident ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Cesium Radioisotopes ,Russian federation ,Ukraine ,business ,Power Plants - Abstract
A wide range of different countermeasures has been used to mitigate the consequences of the Chernobyl accident for agriculture in affected regions in Belarus, Russia and Ukraine. The paper comprehensively brings together key data on countermeasure application over twenty years for all three countries and critically evaluates the response to the accident with respect to agriculture. The extents of countermeasures implementation in various periods following the ChNPP accident are documented. Examples of best practices and drawbacks in remediation of affected areas are identified. Data on the effectiveness of agricultural countermeasures have been evaluated and the impact of countermeasures implementation to mitigate consequences of the accident has been assessed for the period 1986-2006. Implementation of agricultural countermeasures averted 30-40% of the internal collective dose that would have been received by the residents of affected regions without the use of countermeasures. The current situation in agriculture of areas subjected to contamination following the Chernobyl accident is described. Current and future needs for remediation, including a consideration of various strategies of rehabilitation of affected areas are presented.
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- 2007
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9. Radioecology and the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant
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Sergey Fesenko, Sanzharova Ni, and Aleksakhin Rm
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Radionuclide ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cost effectiveness ,law.invention ,Radioecology ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,Environmental protection ,law ,Food products ,Radiological weapon ,Nuclear power plant ,medicine ,Environmental science ,Radiation monitoring ,Accident (philosophy) - Abstract
The ecological features of the 1986 Chernobyl accident and the principles of radiation monitoring of the environment are described. The laws of migration of radionuclides in different media in the environment and the accumulation of radioactive substances in food products are presented. The effect of radiation on the plant and animal worlds in the region of the accident is assessed. A system of protective and remediation measures in the agricutural, forestry, and water spheres is presented, and their radiological and cost effectiveness are estimated. The significance of the complicated and contradictory political and economic conditions during the time of the accident in the USSR (Commonwealth of Independent States) for the assessment of the ecological consequences of the accident is indicated.
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- 2006
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10. Remediation of zones of local radioactive contamination
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Sergey Fesenko, Sanzharova Ni, Panov Av, and Aleksakhin Rm
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Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,Waste management ,Environmental remediation ,Total dose ,Radioactive contamination ,Radiation dose ,Environmental science ,External irradiation ,Russian federation ,Human decontamination ,Irradiation - Abstract
A methodology remediating zones of local radioactive contamination is presented. It is based on a classification of the zones taking account of the contribution of external and internal irradiation to the total dose load to the public. The criteria for identifying such loads and the steps required for their remediation are identified. A radiation-ecological validation of the decrease in the external irradiation dose to the public in zones of local radioactive contamination is given.
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- 2006
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11. Radionuclide migration in forest ecosystems – results of a model validation study
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S. I. Spiridonov, Yves Thiry, George Shaw, Ronny Bergman, Alexei Konoplev, F. Goor, R. Avila, A. Rantavaara, S.V. Mamikhin, M. J. Frissel, Philippe Calmon, A. Orlov, Sergey Fesenko, Igor Linkov, L. Moberg, A.A. Bulgakov, A. Venter, Imperial College at Silwood Park, ENVIROS, Facilia AB, Institute of Experimental Meteorology (IEM), Russian Federal Service for Hydrometeorology and Environmental Monitoring (Roshydromet), Laboratoire de Modélisation Environnementale (DEI/SECRE/LME), Institut de Radioprotection et de Sûreté Nucléaire (IRSN), International Atomic Energy Agency [Vienna] (IAEA), Centre d'Etude de l'Energie Nucléaire (SCK-CEN), Moscow State University, and Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority [Helsinki] (STUK)
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model validation ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,IAEA ,010501 environmental sciences ,migration ,01 natural sciences ,Trees ,Mushroom ,radionuclide migration ,forest ,Theoretical ,Models ,edible mushroom ,chernobyl accident ,Waste Management and Disposal ,time ,Mathematical models ,Biomass (ecology) ,Mathematical model ,Environmental resource management ,article ,Biosphere ,Forestry ,General Medicine ,forest ecosystem ,radioactive contamination ,Pollution ,Europe ,Exchange of information ,Impurities ,137Cs ,forecasting ,Ecosystems ,Chernobyl ,outcomes research ,Contamination ,cesium isotope ,Radioactive contamination ,Forest ecology ,Environmental Chemistry ,Ecosystem ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Radioisotopes ,Hydrology ,cesium 137 ,business.industry ,Basidiomycota ,Experimental data ,prediction ,Models, Theoretical ,15. Life on land ,validation process ,13. Climate action ,Environmental science ,Scale (map) ,business ,expectation ,mathematical model - Abstract
The primary objective of the IAEA's BIOMASS Forest Working Group (FWG) was to bring together experimental radioecologists and modellers to facilitate the exchange of information which could be used to improve our ability to understand and forecast radionuclide transfers within forests. This paper describes a blind model validation exercise which was conducted by the FWG to test nine models which members of the group had developed in response to the need to predict the fate of radiocaesium in forests in Europe after the Chernobyl accident. The outcomes and conclusions of this exercise are summarised. It was concluded that, as a group, the models are capable of providing an envelope of predictions which can be expected to enclose experimental data for radiocaesium contamination in forests over the time scale tested. However, the models are subject to varying degrees of conceptual uncertainty which gives rise to a very high degree of divergence between individual model predictions, particularly when forecasting edible mushroom contamination. Furthermore, the forecasting capability of the models over future decades currently remains untested. © 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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- 2005
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12. Parameters of the Edge Effect as a Function of the Mechanical Characteristics of a Composite with an Interfacial Crack
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Yu. V. Kokhanenko and Sergey Fesenko
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Characteristic function (probability theory) ,Mechanics of Materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,Linear elasticity ,Composite number ,Geometry ,Function (mathematics) ,Edge (geometry) ,Composite material ,Extreme value theory ,Constant (mathematics) ,Mathematics ,Stress concentration - Abstract
The paper studies the dependence of edge effects in a laminated composite of regular structure with a periodic system of symmetric interfacial cracks on the mechanical characteristics of the composite components. Loading the composite induces constant strain in the reinforcement direction. The problem is solved in exact formulation using the linear elastic equations for piecewise-homogeneous media and a criterion for quantitative evaluation of edge effects. An approximate solution of the problem is found by the mesh approach. A difference scheme for the mixed problem under consideration is derived. The edge-effect zones for normal stresses are constructed. The maximum values of the normal stress concentration factors are determined
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- 2003
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13. Influence of Young's Moduli of a Laminated Composite with a Periodic System of Cracks on Edge Effects
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Yurii Vasil'evich Kokhanenko and Sergey Fesenko
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Periodic system ,Materials science ,Mechanics of Materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,Linear system ,Composite number ,Elasticity (physics) ,Composite material ,Approximate solution ,Moduli - Abstract
A problem on edge effects in a laminated composite with a periodic system of symmetric contact cracks is studied. Loading of the composite induces constant deformation in the reinforcement direction beyond the edge effect. The problem is solved in an exact formulation under the linear theory of elasticity for piecewise-homogeneous media. An approximate solution is found by the mesh approach using the concept of a base scheme. For stresses σ ij , the shape and size of the edge effect zone are studied depending on the ratio of Young's moduli of the composite components, which varies over a wide range
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- 2003
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14. Important factors governing exposure of the population and countermeasure application in rural settlements of the Russian Federation in the long term after the Chernobyl accident
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Sergey Fesenko, Panov Av, P. Jacob, Sanzharova Ni, L Cecille, R.M. Alexakhin, and G Fesenko
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Rural Population ,Peat ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Population ,Radiation Dosage ,Russia ,Trees ,Radiation Protection ,Environmental protection ,Human settlement ,Radioactive contamination ,Animals ,Humans ,Soil Pollutants, Radioactive ,Environmental Chemistry ,Rural settlement ,education ,Food Contamination, Radioactive ,Waste Management and Disposal ,health care economics and organizations ,education.field_of_study ,Agriculture ,Environmental Exposure ,General Medicine ,Pollution ,Soil contamination ,Milk ,Countermeasure ,Cesium Radioisotopes ,Environmental science ,Cattle ,Rural area ,Radioactive Hazard Release ,Ukraine - Abstract
Rural settlements located in areas of the Russian Federation contaminated after the Chernobyl accident and exceeding an annual dose of 1 mSv a-1 have been classified according to 137Cs contamination density, internal dose and the neighbourhood of forests. It has been shown that, with the exception of the most contaminated areas, the internal doses decreased in accordance with a decline in 137Cs availability for plant root uptake. An inverse tendency was observed in areas with 137Cs contamination above 555 kBq m-2 which can be explained by a reduction or even termination of countermeasure application and by an increasing consumption of forest products in areas where restrictive countermeasures are still implemented. Twenty-seven settlements have been studied to estimate the effectiveness of countermeasures applied previously and to identify the most important factors governing the radiation exposure to the population and its change with time. It has been shown that the effectiveness of countermeasures which resulted in a decrease of up to 40% of doses has a tendency to decline in the long term. The need for continuation of remediation in rural settlements was evaluated both for selected settlements and extrapolated to the whole contaminated area and it has been shown that the application of countermeasures will be of importance at least up to the year 2045. Rather high effectiveness in terms of internal dose reduction (factor of 2-2.5) of radical improvement (disking, ploughing and reseeding) and administration of Cs binders to animals (Ferrocyn) was demonstrated for the selected settlements. It could be demonstrated that for forest-remote settlements there is a linear dependence between internal dose normalised to the density of contamination and the proportion of peat soils around settlements. For near-forest settlements, this dependence was less pronounced which can be explained by the high contribution of forest food products to the internal dose. Milk is still the major dose-forming product in rural Russian settlements (its contribution to internal dose in forest-remote settlements is above 70%); however, in near-forest settlements, the contribution of mushrooms to the internal dose is comparable to the contribution from milk.
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- 2001
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15. A Comparative Analysis of the Restoration Strategies in Agriculture after Radiation Accidents
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Sergey Fesenko and K.B. Lissiansky
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Radiation ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Agriculture ,business.industry ,Actual practice ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,General Medicine ,business ,Environmental planning ,Radiation Accidents - Abstract
Experience gained in the CIS in the aftermath of serious radiation accidents has shown that the development of optimal strategies for the application of countermeasures in agriculture should be a priority in the contaminated areas. The criteria for the evaluation of the effectiveness of agricultural countermeasures strategies are discussed. The potential effectiveness of application of the most effective countermeasures strategies for contaminated regions of Russia was estimated and compared with scales of countermeasures implementation. The results of these calculations have shown that in actual practice during the liquidation of the consequences of the Chernobyl NPP accident the abilities to reduce dose burdens were not used completely and amounted to 45-75% of that potentially achievable.
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- 1997
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16. FORCON: Local Decision Support System for the Provision of Advice in Agriculture - Methodology and Experience of Practical Implementation
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Sergey Fesenko, B.T. Wilkins, A.F. Nisbet, and N.I. Sanzharov
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Estimation ,Decision support system ,Radiation ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,computer.software_genre ,Expert system ,Countermeasure ,Risk analysis (engineering) ,Agriculture ,Situated ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Acronym ,business ,Settlement (litigation) ,computer - Abstract
Experience gained in the CIS in the aftermath of the Chernobyl accident has demonstrated a need for the development of a practical decision support system capable of providing advice on agricultural countermeasure strategy at the local level. Such a system is being developed within the agricultural countermeasures module of Joint Study Project I under the umbrella of the EC-CIS Agreement on the Consequences of the Chernobyl Accident. This system, which has received the acronym FORCON, takes into account such factors as soil type, current farming practice and management. This paper gives an overview of the main features of the FORCON system. Methodology, models and associated databases used in the system are described. The criteria for the evaluation of the existing radiological situation in agriculture and estimation of the effectiveness of countermeasures are discussed. The comparable analysis of different strategies for implementing countermeasures in a settlement situated on contaminated territory are presented.
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- 1996
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17. Behaviour of Radionuclides in Meadows and Efficiency of Countermeasures
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V. A. Kotik, Sanzharova Ni, S. I. Spiridonov, and Sergey Fesenko
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Radionuclide ,Radiation ,Peat ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,Spatial distribution ,Soil contamination ,Agronomy ,Environmental science ,DNS root zone ,Soil horizon ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Ecosystem ,Water pollution - Abstract
The behaviour of radionuclides and the efficiency of countermeasures were dependent on meadow type. The migration of 137 Cs proceeds much more slowly in the soil profile on dry meadows than on peatlands and flooded land. The half-life of 137 Cs in the root zone changes from 10 to 25 years. The highest transfer factors in grasslands are obtained for peaty lands and flooded meadows, and minimal ones for dry meadows. The first half-life of 137 Cs transfer to plants changes from 2.0 to 2.2 years and the second (slower) half-life changes from 4.0 to 12 years for different meadow types. The countermeasure efficiency in meadows varied from 1.2 to 10.0.
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- 1996
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18. Serious Radiation Accidents and the Radiological Impact on Agriculture
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N.I. Sanzharov, Sergey Fesenko, and R.M. Alexakhin
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education.field_of_study ,Radiation ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,business.industry ,Population ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,Contamination ,Internal dose ,Environmental protection ,Agriculture ,Radiological weapon ,Radioactive contamination ,Environmental science ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Agricultural productivity ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,education ,Radiation Accidents - Abstract
The consumption of food products obtained in areas subjected to radioactive contamination as a consequence of a radiation accident appears to be the most significant source of irradiation for the population. At the same time, this route can be regulated very effectively. The regularities of contamination of agricultural production, peculiar features of internal dose formation in the population and the effectiveness of countermeasures in agriculture have been analysed using the experience of two major accidents in the former USSR - in the South Urals (Kyshtym accident) in 1957, and at the Chernobyl NPP in 1986.
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- 1996
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19. A new approach to predicting environmental transfer of radionuclides to wildlife: a demonstration for freshwater fish and caesium
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Michael Wood, Muikku M, Nicholas A. Beresford, Sergey Fesenko, Tamara L. Yankovich, P. Andersson, and Neil Willey
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Radionuclide ,Environmental Engineering ,biology ,Restricted maximum likelihood ,Fishes ,Water Pollution, Radioactive ,Wildlife ,Soil chemistry ,Animals, Wild ,Fresh Water ,Soil science ,biology.organism_classification ,Models, Biological ,Pollution ,Diversity of fish ,Regression ,Ecology and Environment ,Cesium Radioisotopes ,Environmental chemistry ,Freshwater fish ,Animals ,Environmental Chemistry ,Ecosystem ,Waste Management and Disposal - Abstract
The application of the concentration ratio (CR) to predict radionuclide activity concentrations in wildlife from those in soil or water has become the widely accepted approach for environmental assessments. Recently both the ICRP and IAEA have produced compilations of CR values for application in environmental assessment. However, the CR approach has many limitations, most notably, that the transfer of most radionuclides is largely determined by site-specific factors (e.g. water or soil chemistry). Furthermore, there are few, if any, CR values for many radionuclide-organism combinations. In this paper, we propose an alternative approach and, as an example, demonstrate and test this for caesium and freshwater fish. Using a Residual Maximum Likelihood (REML) mixed-model regression we analysed a dataset comprising 597 entries for 53 freshwater fish species from 67 sites. The REML analysis generated a mean value for each species on a common scale after REML adjustment taking account of the effect of the inter-site variation. Using an independent dataset, we subsequently test the hypothesis that the REML model outputs can be used to predict radionuclide, in this case radiocaesium, activity concentrations in unknown species from the results of a species which has been sampled at a specific site. The outputs of the REML analysis accurately predicted (137)Cs activity concentrations in different species of fish from 27 Finnish lakes; these data had not been used in our initial analyses. We recommend that this alternative approach be further investigated for other radionuclides and ecosystems.
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- 2013
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20. Dynamics of 137Cs Concentration in Agricultural Products in Areas of Russia Contaminated as a Result of the Accident at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant
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Sanzharova Ni, Sergey Fesenko, R.M. Alexakhin, and S. I. Spiridonov
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Biogeochemical cycle ,Radiation ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Radioactive waste ,General Medicine ,Contamination ,Soil contamination ,law.invention ,law ,Environmental protection ,Agriculture ,Radioactive contamination ,Nuclear power plant ,Environmental science ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Arable land ,business - Abstract
The dynamics of 137 Cs concentration in the main types of agricultural products obtained in regions of Russia contaminated as a result of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant (NPP) accident, in 1986, have been analysed. The rate of decline of 137 Cs contamination in agricultural products during the period under study (1987-1992) was not uniform. Reductions of the 137 Cs content of produce was most rapid during the early years after the accident, as a consequence of the intensive application of countermeasures at that time. Half-life periods for 137 Cs content in milk (the basic dose-forming product) and the decrease in products for areas in Russia subjected to the most intensive contamination amounted to 1.6 to 4.8 years, depending on the scale of countermeasures carried out. Half-life periods of decrease of 137 Cs content in other types of agricultural products (grain, potato) were within the range of 2 to 7 years. Based on the comparison of the dynamics of 137 Cs levels in agricultural products of the regions where the countermeasures scales differed, the contribution of countermeasures and of natural biogeochemical processes to the decrease of 137 Cs contamination levels of the main types of agricultural products that determine the dose from internal irradiation of local population has been estimated.
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- 1995
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21. The effects of acute irradiation on a forest biogeocenosis; experimental data, model and practical applications for accidental cases
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R.M. Alexakhin, G.N. Romanov, N.N. Mishenkov, R.T. Karaban, D.A. Spirin, Sergey Fesenko, F.A. Tikhomirov, Ye.A. Fyodorov, S. I. Spiridonov, and B.S. Prister
- Subjects
Betulaceae ,Radionuclide ,Environmental Engineering ,biology ,Ecology ,Radiation dose ,food and beverages ,Betula pubescens ,Herbaceous plant ,biology.organism_classification ,Pollution ,Environmental Chemistry ,Reproductive potential ,Environmental science ,Acute irradiation ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Woody plant - Abstract
The effects of acute irradiations of a mixed pine and birch forest in spring and autumn with a high power point-type gamma radiation source (1180 TBq 137Cs) have been described. Radiation dose relationships for numerous response reactions of woody and herbaceous plants (growth and development of organs of woody plants, cytogenetical, physiological and biochemical changes in trees, reproductive potential of plants, damage and dying off of the forest as a biogeocenosis on the whole) have been calculated. Post-radiation recovery of the forest was investigated. Changes involving the secondary reactions related to radiation damage and death of the trees are presented. A model for radiation damage of forests has been designed. Examples are given on the usage of this model in the description of radiation effects in forests in the event of accidental releases of radionuclides into environment.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Changes in the forms of 137Cs and its availability for plants as dependent on properties of fallout after the Chernobyl nuclear power plant accident
- Author
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V.K. Kuznetsov, L.G. Chernyayeva, V.S. Anisimov, Sanzharova Ni, Sergey Fesenko, and R.M. Alexakhin
- Subjects
Radionuclide ,Environmental Engineering ,Transfer factor ,Environmental engineering ,Radioactive waste ,Sorption ,Dispersion (geology) ,Soil type ,Pollution ,Soil contamination ,Environmental chemistry ,Soil water ,Environmental Chemistry ,Environmental science ,Waste Management and Disposal - Abstract
The dynamics of exchangeable and acid soluble 137 Cs content in soils, as well as 137 Cs transfer factors for natural vegetation were studied for different sites within a 50-km zone around the Chernobyl nuclear power plant after the 1986 accident. Changes in 137 Cs forms in soils during the 6 years after the accidental release of radioactive substances and availability of this radionuclide to plants at that time were dependent on the character of radioactive fallout (fuel particles, aerosols of different dispersion) and soil type. Transformation of different 137 Cs species in soils with time after the accident was observed (destruction of fuel particles, ageing of 137 Cs and changes in the 137 Cs sorption strength of the soil solid phase). Behaviour of 137 Cs in the ‘near’ and ‘remote’ zones was different. The content of exchangeable 137 Cs in soils was found to have decreased after the accident. The average half-life of 137 Cs in grass stand in dry meadow in the ‘remote’ zone is 3.5 years, and in the second (slower) period after the accident, this half-life for 137 Cs will amount to about 17 years. The 137 Cs transfer factors for peaty swamped soils were 3.7–6.6 times as high as for soils of automorphous series.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Whole-body to tissue concentration ratios for use in biota dose assessments for animals
- Author
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Tamara L. Yankovich, Catherine L. Barnett, Brenda J. Howard, Ali Hosseini, Tasuo Aono, Nicholas A. Beresford, Mathew P. Johansen, J. Fesenko, Keiko Tagami, Pamela Bennett, Justin Brown, Michael Wood, Shigeo Uchida, Sergey Fesenko, Marcel M. Phaneuf, Hyoe Takata, John R. Twining, and P. Andersson
- Subjects
Radioisotopes ,Radionuclide ,Radiation ,Food Chain ,Models, Statistical ,Ecology ,Liver and kidney ,Biophysics ,Zoology ,Biota ,Environmental Exposure ,Biology ,Concentration ratio ,Radiation Monitoring ,Environmental monitoring ,Animals ,Humans ,Environmental Pollutants ,Tissue Distribution ,Whole body ,Food Contamination, Radioactive ,Organism ,General Environmental Science ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Environmental monitoring programs often measure contaminant concentrations in animal tissues consumed by humans (e.g., muscle). By comparison, demonstration of the protection of biota from the potential effects of radionuclides involves a comparison of whole-body doses to radiological dose benchmarks. Consequently, methods for deriving whole-body concentration ratios based on tissue-specific data are required to make best use of the available information. This paper provides a series of look-up tables with whole-body:tissue-specific concentration ratios for non-human biota. Focus was placed on relatively broad animal categories (including molluscs, crustaceans, freshwater fishes, marine fishes, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals) and commonly measured tissues (specifically, bone, muscle, liver and kidney). Depending upon organism, whole-body to tissue concentration ratios were derived for between 12 and 47 elements. The whole-body to tissue concentration ratios can be used to estimate whole-body concentrations from tissue-specific measurements. However, we recommend that any given whole-body to tissue concentration ratio should not be used if the value falls between 0.75 and 1.5. Instead, a value of one should be assumed.
- Published
- 2010
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