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February, 2000: Chernobyl (Ukraine)
On the morning of April 26, 1986, a small town in the former Soviet Union was
the site of a nuclear explosion that literally shook the earth. The historic
accident at Chernobyl Nuclear Plant Reactor 4 in the Ukraine caused severe
radioactive contamination. Families within a 30-km zone of the power plant were
evacuated, and in the months that followed, extensive contamination was
discovered in areas up to 100 km from the site. Scientists are hopeful that
plants may play a key role in cleaning up some of the contamination.
In 1989, three years after the explosion, the Soviet government asked the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to assess the radiological and health
situation in the area surrounding the power plant. Among the most significant
findings were radioactive emissions and toxic metals--including iodine,
cesium-137, strontium, and plutonium--concentrated in the soil, plants, and
animals. Such substances are potentially harmful to human health. For example,
although iodine tends to disappear within a few weeks of exposure, it can be
inhaled or ingested and then accumulated in the thyroid gland, where it delivers
high doses of radiation as it decays. Since 1991, the Canadian Nuclear
Association has noted a marked increase in the incidence of thyroid cancer in
the area surrounding the nuclear accident. Cesium-137, radioactive cesium with a
mass number of 137, can enter the food chain and deliver an internal dose of
radiation before it is eliminated metabolically.
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A food web. |
Apparently these toxic substances entered the food chain via
grazers, such as cows and other livestock, that fed on plants grown in
contaminated soils. The toxins then accumulated and concentrated in the meat and
milk products eventually consumed by humans. Additionally, wild foods, such as
berries and mushrooms, are expected to continue showing elevated cesium levels
over the next few decades.
To prevent further spread of these toxins, it was determined that livestock
should be allowed to feed only on uncontaminated plants and on plants not
tending to accumulate toxic metals within their tissues. Then a soil cleanup
method was employed using green plants to remove toxins from the soil. This
technique is phytoremediation, a term coined by Dr. Ilya Raskin of
Rutgers University's Biotechnology Center for Agriculture and the Environment,
who was a member of the original task force sent by the IAEA to examine food
safety at the Chernobyl site. Phytoremediation is a process that takes advantage
of the fact that green plants can extract and concentrate certain elements
within their ecosystem. For example, some plants can grow in metal-laden soils,
extract certain metals through their root systems, and accumulate them in their
tissues without being damaged. In this way, pollutants are either removed from
the soil and groundwater or rendered harmless.
Today, many researchers, institutes, and companies are funding scientific
efforts to test different plants' effectiveness at removing a wide range of
contaminants. Raskin favors Brassica juncea and Brassica carinata,
two members of the mustard family, for phytoremediation. In laboratory tests
with metals loaded onto artificial soil (a mix of sand and vermiculite), these
plants appeared to be the best at removing large quantities of chromium, lead,
copper, and nickel. Several members of this family are edible and yield
additional products such as birdseed, mustard oil, and erucic acid, which is
used in margarine and cooking oil. Researchers at the DuPont Company have found
that corn, Zea mays, can take up incredibly high levels of lead. Z.
mays, a monocot in the Poaceae or grass family, is the most important
cultivated cereal next to wheat and rice, yielding such products as corn meal,
corn flour, cornflakes, cooking oil, beer, and animal feed. Phytokinetics, a
company in Logan, Utah, is testing plants for their ability to remove organic
contaminants such as gasoline from soil and water. Applied Natural Sciences in
Hamilton, Ohio, is taking a slightly different route by using trees to clean up
deeper soils, a process they call "treemediation." University researchers from
the UK reported in the May 1999 issue of Nature Biotechnology that
transgenic tobacco plants can play a role in cleaning up explosives.
Fruit of Brassicaceae. |
Zea mays. |
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Helianthella sp. |
In February 1996, Phytotech, Inc., a Princeton, NJ-based company, reported
that it had developed transgenic strains of sunflowers, Helianthus sp.,
that could remove as much as 95% of toxic contaminants in as little as 24 hours.
Subsequently, Helianthus was planted on a styrofoam raft at one end of a
contaminated pond near Chernobyl, and in twelve days the cesium concentrations
within its roots were reportedly 8,000 times that of the water, while the
strontium concentrations were 2,000 times that of the water. Helianthus
is in the composite, or Asteraceae, family and has edible seeds. It also
produces an oil that is used for cooking, in margarine, and as a paint additive.
H. tuberosus was used by Native Americans as a carbohydrate source
for diabetics.
Cannabis sativa.
In 1998, Phytotech, along with Consolidated Growers and Processors (CGP) and
the Ukraine's Institute of Bast Crops, planted industrial hemp, Cannabis
sp., for the purpose of removing contaminants near the Chernobyl site.
Cannabis is in the Cannabidaceae family and is valuable for its fiber,
which is used in ropes and other products. This industrial variety of hemp,
incidentally, has only trace amounts of THC, the chemical that produces the
"high" in a plant of the same genus commonly known as marijuana.
Overall , phytoremediation has great potential for cleaning up toxic metals,
pesticides, solvents, gasoline, and explosives. The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) estimates that more than 30,000 sites in the United
States alone require hazardous waste treatment. Restoring these areas and their
soil, as well as disposing of the wastes, are costly projects, but the costs are
expected to be reduced drastically if plants provide the phytoremediation
results everyone is hoping for.
Meanwhile, of the original four reactors at Chernobyl, Reactors 1 and 3 are
still operating today, providing 6,000 jobs and about 6% of the Ukraine's
electricity. Reactor 2 was closed after a fire in 1991; the construction of
Reactors 5 and 6 came to a grinding halt after the explosion.
References, Websites, and Further Reading
"Sunflowers Bloom in Tests to Remove Radioactive Metals from Soil and Water,"
Wall Street Journal, 29 February 1996.
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