Modellering af optagelse af organiske stoffer i grøntsager og frugt

Bilag E
Direct soil contact

Given that the amount of attached soil to the plant is wS (kg wet weigth), and that the weight of the plant is wP (kg wet weight).

The net transfer rate (TFnet) is defined as the relative contribution from the attached soil to the total concentration in plant. It can be calculated from

TFnet = fefficiency × wS/wP Equation 25


where

fefficiency is the fraction of the chemical in the attached soil particles actually entering the plant
CB is the chemical concentration in bulk wet soil.


This means that the concentration in washed plant (CP) is calculated from

CP = TFnet · CB + CP,0 Equation 26


where

CP is the concentration of a chemical in plant
CP,0 is the background concentration, i.e. the concentration in the plant if no soil attachment occurs


Let R be the ratio of attached soil to the total plant weight (inclusive soil):

R = wS / (wS+wP) Equation 27

giving

TFnet = R/(1-R) · fefficiency Equation 28


Once deposited on a leaf, the chemical may undergo several fate processes:
It may volatilize
It may be washed off together with the particle
It may be degraded
It may migrate into the leaf

Particles deposited to leaves seem to migrate partly into the cuticle. A significant fraction may remain in foliage even after intense washing (Kaupp 1996). The net transfer factor for a washed plant that has taken up all chemical from the attached soil (fefficiency = 1) is

Equation 29


For R << 1 it follows that TFnet » R, meaning that the contribution from the attachment of soil particles to the soil BCF for the plant (concentration in plant divided by the conentration in bulk wet soil), can be calculated from relative mass loading (mass of soil per mass of plant) on the plant.

Table E.1
Empirical values for mass loadings of soil particles on plants (g soil per g plant dry weight)

Plant

Mass loading

Reference

Pasture grass
< 25 cm height

0.0045

Pinder III et al. (1991)

Pasture grass
> 25 cm height

0.00024

Pinder III et al. (1991)

Broccoli

0.01

Pinder III & McLeod (1989)

Cabbage

0.0011

"

Lettuce

0.260

"

Sunflowers

0.0026

"

Tobacco

0.0021

"

Turnips

0.032

"

Grass

0.018

Li et al. (1994)

Tomatoes

0.017

"

Soybean

0.0021

"

Wheat

0.0048

"

Corn

0.0014

"

Broadbean

0.0095

"

Ryegrass

0.0058

"

MEAN

0.025

 


Table E.1 gives an overview of empirical values of soil mass loadings on plants. The highest loading has lettuce, with 0.26 g soil attached to 1 g lettuce (dry weight). The mean of all values is 0.025 g soil per g dry plant. For a dry weight of 20%, this corresponds to 0.005 g soil per g fresh plant. The default value in the ECOSYS model for nuclear risk assessment is 1% for grass (Paretzke & Garland). The default value of CSOIL is 1% on a dry weight basis, corresponding to 0.1% on a fresh weight basis (Johannes Lijzen, personal communication 2002). RIVM uses 9.8 % average plant dry weight.