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Whole-body to tissue concentration ratios for use in biota dose assessments for animals
Authors:Tamara L Yankovich  Nicholas A Beresford  Michael D Wood  Tasuo Aono  Pål Andersson  Catherine L Barnett  Pamela Bennett  Justin E Brown  Sergey Fesenko  J Fesenko  Ali Hosseini  Brenda J Howard  Mathew P Johansen  Marcel M Phaneuf  Keiko Tagami  Hyoe Takata  John R Twining  Shigeo Uchida
Institution:Environment and Forestry, Saskatchewan Research Council (SRC), Saskatoon, SK, Canada. tamara.yankovich@src.sk.ca
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.
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