Elemental and radionuclide concentrations for several vegetation species from a site in Extremadura, Spain
Data comprise elemental and radionuclide concentrations in freeze-dried Mediterranean plants, seeds and oven dried soil. The samples were collected in June 2014 along a transect located in the Monfragüe National Park which is within the province of Cáceres, western Spain (start: N 33° 49' 47.2'', W 006° 01' 55.4'', end: N 390 49'46.8'', W 0060 02' 05.1'' (geocentric World Geodetic System 1984 (GPS WG 884)). Thirty plant species (Agrostis pourretii; Campanula rapunculus; Taraxacum sp.; Taraxacum officinale; Rumex scutatus; Hypericum perforatum; Schoenoplectus pungens; Erica umbellata; Phillyrea angustifolia; Myrtus communis; Cytisus sp.; Vitis vinifera subsp. Sylvestris; Crataegus monogyna; Daphne gnidium; Quercus ilex; Ruscus aculeatus; Olea europaea subsp. Europaea; Hordeum murinum; Pistacia terebinthus; Acer monspessulanum; Ficus carica; Cistus ladanifer; Eryngium campestre; Carlina vulgaris; Asparagus acutifolius; Viburnum tinus; Tamarix gallica; Jasminum fruticans; Rubia peregrine; Trifolium campestre) and three soil samples were collected and analysed by ICPMS (Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry) or ICPOES (Inductively Coupled Plasma Optical Emission Spectroscopy) to determine their elemental concentrations. Seeds from six of the plant species were also collected and analysed. Plant samples of sufficient mass (n=16) and the three soil samples were also analysed for selected gamma emitting radionuclides (Be-7, Cs-137 and K-40). The work described here was conducted under both the COMET framework (Fission-2012-3.4.1-604794) (http://www.comet-radioecology.org/) and the TREE project (http://tree.ceh.ac.uk/) funded by the Natural Environment Research Council, Environment Agency and Radioactive Waste Management Ltd. It was also supported by the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology which is part of the Natural Environment Research Council of the UK. Full details about this dataset can be found at https://doi.org/10.5285/05d3cbff-fa40-4c42-84e6-54ce6e7bbf5f
dataset
https://data-package.ceh.ac.uk/sd/05d3cbff-fa40-4c42-84e6-54ce6e7bbf5f.zip
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description: Supporting information available to assist in re-use of this dataset
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https://catalogue.ceh.ac.uk/datastore/eidchub/05d3cbff-fa40-4c42-84e6-54ce6e7bbf5f
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https://catalogue.ceh.ac.uk/id/05d3cbff-fa40-4c42-84e6-54ce6e7bbf5f
doi:
eng
environment
Environmental Monitoring Facilities
Habitats and Biotopes
publication
2008-06-01
-7.503
-4.966
40.192
38.672
2014-06-01
2014-06-30
publication
2018-03-14
notPlanned
Mediterranean plants (n=30, listed below), seeds from selected species (n=6, identified by*) and soil (n=3) samples were collected in June 2014 from along a transect located in the Monfragüe National Park which is within the province of Cáceres, western Spain (transect start: N 33° 49' 47.2'', W 006° 0 01' 55.4'', transect end: N 390 49' 46.8'', W 0060 02' 05.1'' (WG 884)). Species collected were: Agrostis pourretii; Campanula rapunculus; Taraxacum sp.; Taraxacum officinale; Rumex scutatus; Hypericum perforatum; Schoenoplectus pungens; Erica umbellata; Phillyrea angustifolia; *Myrtus communis.; Cytisus sp.; Vitis vinifera subsp. Sylvestris; *Crataegus monogyna; Daphne gnidium; Quercus ilex; Ruscus aculeatus; Olea europaea subsp. Europaea; Hordeum murinum; *Pistacia terebinthus; Acer monspessulanum; Ficus carica; *Cistus ladanifer; Eryngium campestre; Carlina vulgaris; Asparagus acutifolius; *Viburnum tinus; Tamarix gallica; Jasminum fruticans; Rubia peregrine and Trifolium campestre. \nSamples were stored as cool as possible prior to immediate transport to the UK where, on arrival, they were freeze-dried, weighed and then finely ground using a Christian-Norris vegetation mill. Sub-samples were then taken for gamma analysis from plant samples of larger mass (n=16) and the three soil samples. All the remaining ground soil and plant material was then re-weighed and digested using an aqua regia reagent (fresh 3:1 mixture of concentrated HNO3 and HCl ‘Aristar’ grade acids) at 175°C for 12 minutes using a microwave oven (CEM, MarsXpress). Analysis of the digests was then conducted by ICPMS (Perkin Elmer, NeXION 300D) or ICPOES (Perkin Elmer, Optima 7300 DV).\nICPMS and ICPOES measurements were made using two types of instrument operation, either semi-quantitative or quantitative or (using Perkin Elmer Total Quant software). The semi-quantitative measurements were made using the ICPMS instrument operating in kinetic energy discrimination (KED) mode with the addition of helium gas. The quantitative measurements were made using external calibration after spiking the digests with 10 µg l-1 Ga, In and Re as internal standards to compensate for instrumental drift and matrix effects. The semi-quantitative and quantitative modes differed as the former used an element concentration to intensity response curve to extrapolate concentrations over a wide mass range. ICPMS and ICPOES instrument limits of detection (LOD) were calculated by using the mean and three standard deviation measurements for the digestion reagent blank. For some elements determined using the semi-quantitative ICPMS method it was not possible to determine instrument LODs from the analysis of a digestion reagent blank and in these cases the instrument LODs were estimated from an assessment of instrument sensitivity and assigned a value of 0.001 µg l-1 (assumed to be equivalent to a mean method LOD of 0.001 mg kg-1). Total method LODs for each element were then calculated to take account the sample mass and the dilution arising from the digestion procedure. \nTo determine the activity concentration of Be-7, K-40 and Cs-137, soil and plant samples of sufficient mass, were analysed on hyper-pure germanium detectors for four days using an efficiency calibration suited to their sample density. The detectors were calibrated for efficiency using a mixed radionuclide standard which covered an energy range of approximately 59 -1850 keV and resultant spectra were analysed using the Canberra Apex software. The detectors were calibrated against standards of various density and volume, and the laboratory regularly participates in proficiency testing schemes. Minimum detectable activity (MDA) concentrations differ on a sample by sample basis dependant on detector, count time, sample type and sample mass/volume. \nElemental concentrations are reported as milligrams per kilogram dry mass. Radionuclide activity concentrations are reported as becquerel per kilogram dry mass. Concentrations at or below the LOD or MDA are preceded by a <.
publication
2010-12-08
Comma-separated values (CSV)
© UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
If you reuse this data, you should cite: Barnett, C.L., Wells, C., Thacker, S., Lawlor, A.J., Corrales Vázquez, J.M. , Wood, M.D., Beresford, N.A. (2018). Elemental and radionuclide concentrations for several vegetation species from a site in Extremadura, Spain. NERC Environmental Information Data Centre https://doi.org/10.5285/05d3cbff-fa40-4c42-84e6-54ce6e7bbf5f
author
author
author
author
LARUEX (Environmental Radioactivity Laboratory), Dpt. Applied Physics, Faculty of Veterinary Sciences
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https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8722-0238
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Lancaster Environment Centre, Library Avenue, Bailrigg
Lancaster
LA1 4AP
UK
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2025-01-10T11:45:47