6th International Conference on Radioecology & Environmental Radioactivity
Marseille, France
24-29 November 2024

Programme at a glance

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Side-events

All workshops and refresher courses are available free of charge

Workshops

  • Ring of Five
    • Sunday 24 November – 14:00-18:00
    • The workshop is restricted to members of the Ro5
    • Contact for more information: olivier.masson@irsn.fr

  • "Improvement of Radiological Monitoring Networks with Nal Scintillator and SiPM for Routine and Emergency Surveillance"
    • In radiological emergencies, quickly and accurately gathering detailed information is crucial for an effective response and mitigation. Today, advanced information retrieval systems are available that use less power, making them both cost-effective and easy to deploy. These systems do more than just measure dose rates; they use gamma spectroscopy to provide detailed insights into radiation levels and contamination zones. Their low power consumption means they can be easily installed and operated, even with solar panels, removing the need for extensive infrastructure. By being affordably priced, these systems make critical information accessible to a broader range of users, thereby enhancing overall emergency preparedness and response capabilities.
    • Presenter : M. Rainer Dielmann (Bertin Technologies)
    • Monday 25 November – 18:30-19:30

  • "A new global look at radionuclides un marine organisms and seafood dose"
    • In this short workshop, we will demonstrate how to access the newly updated IAEA MARIS database with emphasis on radionuclide activity concentrations in the edible tissues of marine organisms. We will summarise lessons learned from a review of more than 130 published studies on seafood ingestion dose from around the world and demonstrate the use of newly developed data and parameters. The emphasis will be on avoiding the pitfalls of incomplete or unrepresentative approaches and ensuring future studies have valid and helpful outcomes. The new data, parameters and approaches come from the recently completed IAEA Coordinated  Research Project LAMER.
    • Presenters:  Sabine Charmasson (IRSN), Paul Mc Ginnity (IAEA), Mathew Johansen (ANSTO)
    • Wednesday 27 November – 14:00-15:00
  • "ALLIANCE Young Researchers Meeting"
    •  Come join us at the Alliance's Young Researchers to discuss with young actors of research and expand your network! Following a short coffee break, senior researchers Maksim Gusyev and Hyoei Takata, from the Institute of Environmental Radioactivity (Japan), will be presenting their latest research about the Fukushima exclusion zone. Right after, learn more about the Alliance and it's initiatives with senior members of the board Almudena Real and Rodolphe Gilbin. We look forward to seeing you all there, and exchanging with you about the latest advancements in our field of research!

Refresher courses

  • Ecosystem approaches in radioecology - Rodolphe Gilbin (IRSN) 
    • This refresher course will aim to inform participants on the issues related to ecosystem approaches in radioecology. It will emphasize the complexity of ecosystem health, which requires defining metrics beyond the individual responses of organisms currently at the basis of the environmental radiation protection system. It will explore possibilities for the development of broader impact assessment (as proposed for example by ICRP Working Group 125 on ecosystem services) and identify research needs for the development of such holistic approach aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals and ensuring overall human and environmental well-being.
    • Tuesday 26 November – 8:00-9:00

  • Radiation-induced transgenerational and multigenerational effects in human and non-human biota - Olivier Armand (IRSN)
    • Ionizing radiations are potentially hazardous agents with the ability to cause long-term heritable effects due to their genotoxic properties. As both human and non-human biota can be exposed to ionizing radiations, this refresher course proposes to examine the distinctions between transgenerational and multigenerational exposures, and provide an overview over the current knowledge on the effects on offspring in human and non-human biota, that can manifest through genetic and epigenetic alterations.
    • Wednesday 27 November – 8:00-9:00

  • Environmental risk assessment (including use of ERICA tool) - David Copplestone (Stirling University)
    • To demonstrate the protection of the environment from ionising radiation, risk assessors often apply tools such as ERICA to quantify radiological impacts on plants and animals. Recent updates to ERICA have introduced changes in radionuclide transfer and dosimetry and are being considered for radiological effects (risk characterisation) that we will review and discuss. The refresher course will also outline some of the proposed changes to Environmental Radiological Protection within the International System of Radiological Protection.
    • Thursday 28 November – 8:00-9:00

Guest speaker

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Gonéri Le Cozannet

Gonéri Le Cozannet is researcher in the area of coastal risks and adaptation at BRGM, the French geological survey. He is member of the French Climate Change Committee (Haut Conseil pour le Climat) and one of the lead authors of the Working Group 2 of the 6th assessment report on impacts, vulnerability and adaptation.

Climate change : what do we learn from the 6th assessment report of the IPCC ?

As anticipated decades ago, limited progress in reducing greenhouse gas emissions has led to climate change reaching 1.3°C above preindustrial levels. This rise significantly impacts human activities and the global economy, with climate-related disasters resulting in over €10 billion in losses in France in 2022 alone, according to the insurance industry. This presentation will highlight key findings from the IPCC’s 6th Assessment Report on climate change, its impacts and the adaptation and mitigation options. Mitigation and adaptation are interconnected; for example, long-lived critical infrastructures, like nuclear plants, must consider future sea-level rise over the coming decades and centuries. Yet, the rate of sea-level rise acceleration depends on greenhouse gas emissions and the response of polar ice sheets to warming, which implies that decision must be taken in a context of deep uncertainties.

Plenary speakers

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Hildegarde Vandenhove – IAEA

Optimization of Radiation Protection in the Management of Radioactive Waste and Environmental Releases, Decommissioning and Remediation: A Key Contribution to Enabling Sustainability

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) organised the first International Conference on Ensuring Safety and Enabling Sustainability in Radioactive Waste Management, Decommissioning, Environmental Protection and Remediation. The conference explored the relationship between safety and sustainability from two perspectives: how does radiation protection and safety contribute to sustainable development and, how does sustainability inform our approach to radiation protection and safety? The use of nuclear science and technology is not sustainable unless it is safe throughout its life cycle. Referring to the back-end: unless there is a clear plan for the safe management of associated radioactive waste and environmental releases, the safe decommissioning of facilities, and remediation of contaminated sites. It refers back to Fundamental Safety Principle 7: “People and the environment, present and future, must be protected against radiation risks.” Safety is not the only factor that contributes to sustainable development. Making something safe does not automatically make it sustainable. For example, fundamental Safety Principle 5 requires that when assessing whether the safety measures applied to facilities and activities that give rise to radiation risks are optimized - we take account of economic, societal, and environmental factors (three pillars of sustainability).

This keynote will explore the relationship between safety and sustainability in the context of waste, decommissioning and remediation and highlight the major outcomes of the conference. There was a strong consensus that safety is a key component of sustainability and an equally strong consensus that safety on its own is not sufficient to enable sustainability. It was postulated that the relationship between safety and sustainability could be more explicit and proposed that optimisation of protection and safety should be considered in the context of sustainability and the achievement of Sustainable Development Goals, concluding that optimisation of radiation protection and safety is necessary to enable sustainability. We will explore the opportunities that this perspective unfolds. We will highlight how the IAEA Safety Standards integrate the aspects of safety and sustainability and provide some specific examples on the consideration of optimisation of safety in the context of overall sustainability.

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Deborah Oughton - Norwegian University of Life Sciences

Does Nuclear Power have a Future in Norway? 

Over the past few years there has been an increased focus in the applicability of nuclear power in Norway. Politicians, NGOs, the public and scientists have all expressed an interest, leading to, at times, heated debate on the applicability of the technology. The deployment of small modular reactors has been proposed both for remote communities and as power sources for ships. Using Norway as a test case, this talk will examine some of the societal and technical challenges facing new nuclear technologies, with a particular focus on the potential environmental impacts and the research needs from radioecology. 

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Georg Steinhauser - Technische Universität Wien

Understanding the wild boar paradox

After the Chornobyl nuclear accident in 1986, it was soon discovered that all kinds of forest animals exhibited high pollution levels with radiocesium. With many of these (deer, hare, etc.) contamination levels declined fairly rapidly, however, not with wild boar. Especially in the Alpine regions of Austria and Germany, they exhibited not only very high (up to 20 kBq/kg) but also very persistent levels of 137Cs. In some cases, the decline of 137Cs activity concentrations was slower than what would be expected only due to the half-life of 137Cs (30 years). In other words: wild boar seemingly violate the law of radioactive decay. This discrepancy was hence termed "wild boar paradox." Using 135Cs/137Cs as an isotopic fingerprint, we could show that wild boars are contaminated not only by "new" Chornobyl cesium, but also by disproportional amounts of "old" nuclear weapons fallout cesium (Stäger et al., 2023). This novel insight finally allows understanding the wild boar paradox. It seems the root to the problem is an underground food source.

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Mike Wood - University of Salford, United Kingdom

Radioecology – in memoriam? 

Radioecology has been a driving force for broader ecological science development and has provided the scientific foundations for environmental radiation protection internationally. However, to those outside the field, radioecology is often viewed as a niche area – a “cottage industry” with limited wider relevance. Except for periods following the accidents at Chornobyl and Fukushima, radioecological research funding over the last 50 years has been limited. The temporal fluctuations in funding have resulted in periods of expansion and contraction of the radioecological community. Despite an increasing global shift towards nuclear power within the energy mix, the current period is characterised by dwindling sources of funding for radioecology and, seemingly, fewer and fewer researchers identifying themselves as ‘radioecologists’.

Other global events have also taken their toll on radioecology, most notably the war in Ukraine. The Chornobyl Exclusion Zone, which is arguably the most important natural laboratory for radioecological research, has become a ‘no go’ area once more for most of the international research community. Field studies have necessarily been abandoned and access to sample archives and equipment has been lost. Although papers evaluating the impacts of radiation on the wildlife of Chornobyl continue to be published, these papers are predominantly based on data collected prior to the Russian invasion in February 2022 and the availability of such data is finite.

Radioecology has potentially also suffered from honesty within the research community. Even in the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone, many radioecological studies have struggled to demonstrate significant impacts of radiation on wildlife populations. Ecological research generally yields highly variable data and, where effects sizes are low, impacts may be obscured as a result. However, it is challenging to convince funders and other stakeholders of the need to invest significant resources in the pursuit marginal effects. With widespread recognition of the global biodiversity crisis and highly ambitious conservation targets set for 2030, increasing focus is being placed on more readily identifiable drivers of population impacts.

In the face of these various pressures, the radioecolgist’s niche has become increasingly constrained. Adaptation is an inevitable consequence in the quest for research survival. This adaptation has been reflected in two key strategies: (i) attempt to reenforce the central importance of radioecology; and (ii) expand into different research niches. I will explore the implications of these strategies for radioecology, addressing the fundamental question of whether radioecology is dead and, if it isn’t, what the future of radioecology may look like.

Thematic sessions

1. Management of NORM impacted areas, including legacy sites, high-background areas and radon impacted sites and NORMs in drinking water and food: from risk assessment to remediation
Chaired by Sanjay Kumar Jha (BARC) and Jelena Mrdakovic Popic (DSA) 

This session focuses on the topic of managing areas affected by Naturally Occurring Radioactive Materials (NORM). NORM encompasses multiple aspects in this session, including legacy sites, high-background areas, sites impacted by radon as well as drinking water and food. The focus extends from comprehensive risk assessment to sustainable and effective remediation strategies, considering the concept of circular economy and possible reuse of NORM waste. Insights on the dynamic interactions of NORM with the environment and human health are also welcome.

2. Radioactive waste management and disposal
Chaired by Joanne Brown (IAEA) and Julia Carpenter (ARPANSA)

This session is dedicated to the impact of radioactive waste management and disposal on humans and the environment. It serves as a forum for the exploration of challenges, innovations, and best practices in handling radioactive waste from the different waste categories (including LLW, ILW, VLLW, HLW, SNF). Within this session, experts, researchers, and practitioners will share their insights into the latest advancements and strategies for the safe and sustainable management of radioactive waste. Topics covered will encompass the treatment, storage, and ultimate disposal in surface or deep ground with a focus on the behavior and transfer of radionuclides in the environment and impact on humans and the environment.

3. New development on measurements and metrology
Chaired by José Marcus Godoy (PUC-Rio) and Filip Vanhavere (SCK CEN)

This session deals with relevant innovations and methods in the field of metrology. Rapid methods and more sophisticated analysis and measurement techniques, as well as in situ measurements, are concerned. Advances in sampling, data processing, computer applications, laboratory facilities and field monitoring techniques are welcomed. Various types of quality assurance issues are important in metrology and also part of the scope of the session.

4. Emergency preparedness and revitalization: lessons from the past and current world events 
Chaired by Olivier Isnard (IRSN) and Hirofumi Tsukada (IER-Fukushima University)

Recent events on Ukrainian territory have triggered a complex, multi-faceted crisis that require the utmost attention in terms of emergency preparedness and response. This session presents an invaluable opportunity to assess the effectiveness of the preparedness and response strategies deployed to mitigate the impact of this crisis. Additionally, it serves as a platform for discussing the crucial task of environmental restoration following nuclear and radiological disasters. Topics to be addressed encompass decontamination measures and the reduction of activity concentration of radionuclides, drawing insights from lessons learned in the past and current world events. Indeed, the significance of preparedness takes center stage when reflecting on the aftermath of events like Chernobyl and Fukushima. Of outmost importance is the active exchange of knowledge and insights among decision makers, practitioners, stakeholders, and the scientific community. Participation from each of these diverse communities is critical and particularly welcome.

5. Effects of radioactivity on the ecosystems: from a mechanistic understanding to a holistic approach of radiation protection
Chaired by Rodolphe Gilbin (IRSN)/(ALLIANCE) and Carmel Mothersill (McMaster)/(IUR)

The session will focus on mechanistic understanding of the processes inducing radiation effects at different levels of biological organization, including the consequences on ecosystem integrity. It includes multigenerational responses, hereditary effects, adaptive responses, genomic instability, and epigenetic changes, as well as effect of co-stressors. New approaches of upscaling from molecular mechanisms of effect to impact at populational level are of particular importance, as well as approaches allowing to encompass all aspects of radiation protection at the ecosystem levels (conservation of biological diversity, ecosystems structure and functioning, both for their intrinsic value and because of the key role they plays in providing the ecosystem goods and other services upon which we all ultimately depend).

6. Understanding and modelling radionuclide mobility and bioavailability in the environment
Chaired by Laureline Février (IRSN) and Mathew Johansen (ANSTO)

Assessing radiological impact of radionuclide releases in a realistic way relies on a good understanding of their distributions in the environment, from their dispersion and transfer in the atmospheric, aquatic and terrestrial media up to their uptake and accumulation in biotic organisms. The session will focus on new experimental findings, as well as development of models able to describe and predict these transfers in different contexts (from short-term after a release to long-term scenarios). All types of models, from conservative assessment models to more detailed research models are welcome.

7. Consequences of global changes on radioecology
Chaired by Mathew Johansen (ANSTO) and Olivier MASSON (IRSN)

This session looks at the relationship between global changes and the field of radioecology. At a time of profound transformations in our planet's climate, ecosystems and human activities, it is becoming increasingly important to understand how these changes may affect either directly or indirectly (by affecting the ecosystems themselves or their functioning) the distribution and fate of radionuclides in the environment, as well as their effect. The evolving methodologies and tools that are enabling us to adapt to these challenges will also be discussed.

8. Advancing radioecology with artificial intelligence and Big Data
Chaired by Olivier Radakovitch (IRSN) and Trevor Stocki (Radiation Protection Bureau - Health Canada)

This session looks at the cutting-edge crossroads of radioecology and advanced technologies. Artificial intelligence (AI) and Big Data are transforming the understanding of radioecology, and this session will explore the dynamic role of these technologies in advancing our knowledge; and how these innovative tools are contributing to more precise risk assessments and informed decision-making in the nuclear industry and environmental science.

9. Fostering engagement between radioecology and society: promoting communication and citizen science initiatives
Chaired by Thierry Schneider (CEPN)/(ICRP) and Yevgeniya Tomkiv (NMBU)

This session seeks to promote trust, understanding, and engagement among radioecologists, the nuclear industry, policymakers, and the public through the promotion of effective communication, transparency, and citizen participation. It will promote actions regarding improved communication, collaboration, and the active involvement of citizens in understanding and addressing radioecological issues, making the session an important and timely topic in the context of environmental and nuclear science. Development of innovative approaches and methods to facilitate the exchange of essential information between various entities, including governments, industry, and the public are welcome.

REFRESHER COURSE - Olivier Armant (IRSN)

08:00 - 09:00 - Auditorium

Ionizing radiations are potentially hazardous agents with the ability to cause long-term heritable effects due to their genotoxic properties. As both human and non-human biota can be exposed to ionizing radiations, this refresher course proposes to examine the distinctions between transgenerational and multigenerational exposures, and provide an overview over the current knowledge on the effects on offspring in human and non-human biota, that can manifest through genetic and epigenetic alterations.

07:30 - 08:00
Welcome desk
RECEPTION OPENING

SESSION 2 : RADIOACTIVE WASTE MANAGEMENT AND DISPOSAL

09:00 - 10:20 - Auditorium
09:00

O2-09 - Resuspension of Pu trace in the air from past irradiated U reprocessing activities in a UF4 conversion facility - Olivier Masson, IRSN

09:20

O2-10 - Iodine-129 Paradox in Nuclear Fuel Cycle - Is Dilution a Solution? - Haruko Wainwright, MIT

09:40

O2-11 - An operational workflow using non-stationary geostatistics for mapping contamination from in situ radiological measurements: a case study in the Fukushima area - Meryem Meziane, Mines Paris Tech/IRSN

10:00

02-12 - 1D Numérical modeling of radionuclide transfer in deep geological disposal : A comparative study between MELODIE and COSMOL - Rafael Deptulski, IRSN

08:00 - 09:00
Auditorium
REFRESHER COURSE - Olivier Armant (IRSN)
RADIATION-INDUCED TRANSGENERATIONAL AND MULTIGENERATIONAL EFFECTS IN HUMAN AND NON-HUMAN BIOTA

SESSION 9 : FOSTERING ENGAGEMENT BETWEEN RADIOECOLOGY AND SOCIETY: PROMOTING COMMUNICATION AND CITIZEN SCIENCE INITIATIVES

09:00 - 10:20 - Room "Vieux-Port 300"
09:00

O9-01 - OPENRED: Development of a Citizen Science Network for the Measurement of Environmental Gamma Radiation in Spain - Francisco Sanz, Ibercivis Foundation

09:20

O9-02 - Exploring the potential of citizen science for radon research - Yevgeniya Tomkiv, NMBU

09:40

O9-03 - OpenRadiation: a collaborative project for radioactivity measurements in the environment by the public - Jean-Marc Bertho, IRSN

10:00

O9-04 - The Remlingen Public Lab for Radioactivity Measurements – Exploring the Potential for Science-Citizen Collaborations in an Emotionally Charged Debate Environment - Wolfgang Schulz, Hannover Univ.

COFFE BREAK / POSTER SESSION

10:20 - 10:50 - Room "Vieux-Port 500"

  • P3-01 - Determination of Pu-239 in various environmental samples on mass-shift mode as PuO2+ by triple quadrupole inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry - Sophie Pichler, AGES
  • P3-02 - Rapid mineralization of environmental sampless with microwave for determination of 238Pu, 239+240Pu, 234U, 235U and 238 U - Marion Rodier, SPRA
  • P3-03 - A new method of a simultaneous separation and distillation of water from environmental samples for tritium analysis - Hideki Kakiuchi, IES
  • P3-04 - Developing carbon-14 passive monitoring devices from tritium passive monitoring devices - Vanessa Durand, IRSN
  • P3-05 - The Development of Continuous Beta Monitoring System in the Environment of Underwater Beta and Gamma Contamination - Seungbin Yun, UNIST
  • P3-06 - Twelve years of Worldwide Proficiency Testing for Radionuclides in Sea Water Samples - Overview of IAEA Support to Quality Assurance in Member State Laboratories - Katarzyna Sobiech-Matura, NAML, IAEA
  • P3-07 - Quantification of the natural and synthetic components in caffeine by Carbon-14 determination through a batch combustion and liquid scintillation counting method - Arya Krishnan Kambikkanath, Mangalore Univ.

  • P5-01 - Radioactivity of residues from waste incineration facilities in Finland - Sinikka Virtanen, STUK
  • P5-02 - Tritium distribution in environmental compartments at underground nuclear test locations of the Semipalatinsk Test Site - Natasha Larionova, NNC
  • P5-04 - The open-source MARIM database to assess the radiological impact on microorganisms - Flore Ploquin, Clermont Auvergne Univ./CNRS
  • P5-05 - Physiological effects of gamma irradiation combined to Nosema ceranae infection in the honeybee, Apis mellifera – BEERAD - Margot Crevet, IRSN
  • P5-06 - The radionuclide activity concentrations in marine fishes around off Fukushima in Japan - Tatsuo Aono, F-REI
  • P5-07 - Population modelling to compare risks for fitness and function in a secondary consumer exposed to radionuclides over multiple generations - Frederic Alonzo, IRSN
  • P5-08 - BEECONECT: a connected “flower” to measure the effects of radioactive contamination on the cognitive health of insect pollinators - Olivier Armant, IRSN
  • P5-09 - Evaluation of potassium transporters affecting caesium distribution in the plant shoot - Masashi Kihana, IES
  • P5-10 - From root to shoot: uptake, translocation and speciation of Eu(III) in hydroponically grown plants - Max Klotzsche, HZDR
  • P5-11 - Assessing radiological hazards, lead content, levels of other heavy metals, and fingerprint development for paints from selected african countries: implications for environmental health using gamma-ray spectroscopy and ICP-MS analysis - Stephen Friday Olukotun, North-West Univ.
  • P5-12 - Ionizing radiation of Gammarus fossarum affect their reproduction but not their food consumption - Sandrine Frelon, IRSN
  • P5-13 - The MIRCOM microbeam : a versatile instrument for environmental research - Christelle Adam-Guillermin, IRSN
  • P5-14 - Protein expression patterns and activities of two metabolic enzymes (CS and LDH) highlight a disturbance in the metabolic pathways of tree frogs living in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone - Sandrine Frelon, IRSN
  • P5-15 - Soil trophic interactions under radio contamination : an in-situ study in the Fukushima Prefecture cedar forests - Olivier Armant, IRSN

  • P6-23 - Variability of radionuclide activity across soil layers and their occurrence in riverbed sediments (Aragats massif, Armenia) - Nona Movsisyan, CENS
  • P6-24 - Radiocesium mobility in the environment after the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant accident. -Variation of 137Cs concentration in sediments in a brackish lake, Matsukawa-ura lagoon - Misono Toshiharu, JAEA
  • P6-25 - Radiocesium mobility in the environment after the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant accident - Evaluation of the particle size distribution of the SPM and the radioactive SPM - Abe Tomohisa, JAEA
  • P6-26 - Radiocesium mobility in the environment after the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant accident -137Cs and 14C in freshwater fish (Masu trout) 7 years after the Fukushima nuclear accident: Comparison of wild fish and farmed fish - Takahiro Nakanishi, JAEA
  • P6-27 - Radiocesium mobility in the environment after the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant accident: Simulation study on 137Cs behavior in brackish lake, Matsukawa-ura Lagoon - Kazuyuki Sakuma, JAEA
  • P6-28 - Radionuclide Transport in Permafrost Conditions: Facilitating Dose Calculations from Small Modular Nuclear Reactors in the Arctic - Trevor J. Stocki, Health Canada
  • P6-29 - Distributions of Sr-90 and Cs-137 activity concentrations in soils impacted by the Fukushima nuclear accident - Norbert Kavasi, F-REI
  • P6-30 - Further development of radioecological investigations in arid environment - Mauritius Hiller, RadCon GmbH
  • P6-31 - IAEA-Coordinated Research Advances Knowledge of Soil-Plant Transfer Factors in Arid and Semi-Arid Environments - Amelia Lee Zhi Yi, IAEA
  • P6-32 - The uptake of atmospheric tritium by vegetable crops under climatic conditions of the steppe zone of Kazakhstan - Yelena Polivkina, NNC
  • P6-33 - Experimental study of aerial tritium uptake by crops under laboratory and field conditions - Yelena Syssoyeva, NNC
  • P6-34 - Content of tritium in the plant cover of underground test locations at the semipalatinsk test site - Pavel Krivitskiy, NNC
  • P6-35 - Natural and anthropogenic radionuclides content in milk samples and in other food and environmental matrices in Northern Italy - Michele Colucci, Milan Univ.
  • P6-36 - Transfer of radioactivity from agricultural soils to food crops in Croatia with focus on elevated activities from Pelješac peninsula - Katja Magdić Košiček, RBI
  • P6-37 - Cs and nutrients Ca, Mg, K transfer in compartments soil/solution/Arabidospsis thaliana depending on K concentration - Christelle Latrille, CEA
  • P6-38 - Transfer factors of radionuclides from soil to plants at the semipalatinsk test site beyond test locations - Natalya Larionova, NNC
  • P6-39 - Investigating the transport behavior and uptake of I-125 and Tc-99 considering the influence of plant-microbe interactions - Tarequl Nishad, Hannover Univ.
  • P6-40 - Sorption of Ba and Sr onto Gibbsite and Quartz: a batch and modeling study - Viktor Dück, HZDR
  • P6-41 - Impact of organic matter on radium mobility in soils - Sophie RIHS, Strasbourg Univ.
  • P6-42 - Measuring uptake of radium in crops - Sara Grolander, SLU
  • P6-43 - Characterization of uranium-natural organic matter dissolved complexes by spectrofluorescence analysis - Hugo Carreira, IRSN
  • P6-44 - Colloidal vectors of Uranium in an Aqueous Environment as determined by using the LC-OCD-OND-UV-ICPMS: Application to the Former Mining Site of Rophin (Puy-de-Dôme, France) - Maxime Chaillou, Subatech
  • P6-45 - How do uranium and malic acid affect the microbial community in a reference soil? - Raúl Eduardo Linares Jiménez, HZDR
  • P6-46 - Uranium, thorium, and transition metal mobility and bioavailability in sediment, flora, and fauna in a North American salt marsh - Sarah Donaher, Tennessee Knoxville Univ.
  • P6-47 - Release of uranium from contaminated soils under flow-through saturated conditions - Estela Reinoso-Maset, NMBU
  • P6-48 - Bioassociation of europium by Phaseolus vulgaris plants - Julia Dauwe, HZDR

  • P8-01 - Leveraging multi-omics data integration in the study of Chornobyl tree frogs - Elen Goujon, IRSN

  • P9-01 - CzechRad – new device for Citizen Monitoring developed in Czechia by SÚRO - Petr Kuča, SURO
  • P9-02 - Enhancing radiological impact assessments of nuclear facilities to better support reaching a consensus on sufficient maturity among different stakeholders - Ari Ikonen, EnviroCase, Ltd.
  • P9-03 - Akademeia High School Radon Hunt - citizen science for raising radon awarness and active way for teaching - Dariusz Aksamit, AHS RadonHunt

09:00 - 10:20
Auditorium
SESSION 2 : RADIOACTIVE WASTE MANAGEMENT AND DISPOSAL

09:00 - 10:20
Room "Vieux-Port 300"
SESSION 9 : FOSTERING ENGAGEMENT BETWEEN RADIOECOLOGY AND SOCIETY: PROMOTING COMMUNICATION AND CITIZEN SCIENCE INITIATIVES

SESSION 6 : UNDERSTANDING AND MODELLING RADIONUCLIDE MOBILITY AND BIOAVAILABILITY IN THE ENVIRONMENT

10:50 - 12:30 - Auditorium
10:50

O6-17 - Using Taxonomy and Phylogeny to Predict Inter-taxa Radionuclide Transfer and Enhance Radioactivity Monitoring in the Coastal Environment - Daisy Hunt, UWE/CEFAS

11:10

O6-18 - Exploring the Fate and Dynamics of Low-Level Cs-137 in the Malaysian Ecosystem - MOHAMAD SYAZWAN MOHD SANUSI, UTM

11:30

O6-19 - Hydro-sedimentary modelling of radionuclides transport applied to harbor area (the Cherbourg roadstead, Normandy, France) - Alexandre Ohier, EAMEA

11:50

O6-20 - Modeling cesium-137 concentrations in a global fallout affected watershed by coupling an hydrosedimentary model with a trace metal transfer equation - François Guillory, IRSN

12:10

O6-21 - The radiological impact from NORM discharges in the North Sea – A near-field study - Govert de With, Govert de With, NRG

10:20 - 10:50
Room "Vieux-Port 500"
COFFE BREAK / POSTER SESSION

SESSION 9 : FOSTERING ENGAGEMENT BETWEEN RADIOECOLOGY AND SOCIETY: PROMOTING COMMUNICATION AND CITIZEN SCIENCE INITIATIVES

10:50 - 12:30 - Room "Vieux-Port 300"
10:50

O9-05 - Public attitudes and its changes before and after the offshore discharge of ALPS-treated water from the Fukushima Daiichi Power Station - Midori Aoyagi, NIES

11:10

O9-06 - Promoting trust and communication: a framework for radiological monitoring and assessment in Australia - Julia  Carpenter, ARPANSA

11:30

O9-07 - Beating Lung Cancer Caused by Radon through the RadoNorm Citizen Science Incubator - Dariusz Aksamit, AHS RadonHunt

11:50

O9-08 - Environmental radioactivity monitoring in Italy: RADIOLAB and EyeRAD projects - Flavia Groppi, Milan Univ.

12:10

O9-09 - Empowering collaboration: Integrating knowledge management and civil society engagement as a key for European radioactive waste management initiatives - Christophe Debayle, IRSN

10:50 - 12:30
Auditorium
SESSION 6 : UNDERSTANDING AND MODELLING RADIONUCLIDE MOBILITY AND BIOAVAILABILITY IN THE ENVIRONMENT

10:50 - 12:30
Room "Vieux-Port 300"
SESSION 9 : FOSTERING ENGAGEMENT BETWEEN RADIOECOLOGY AND SOCIETY: PROMOTING COMMUNICATION AND CITIZEN SCIENCE INITIATIVES

WORKSHOP : A NEW GLOBAL LOOK AT RADIONUCLIDES IN MARINE ORGANISMS AND SEAFOOD DOSE

14:00 - 15:00 - Room "Vieux-Port 300"
  • In this short workshop, we will demonstrate how to access the newly updated IAEA MARIS database with emphasis on radionuclide activity concentrations in the edible tissues of marine organisms. We will summarise lessons learned from a review of more than 130 published studies on seafood ingestion dose from around the world and demonstrate the use of newly developed data and parameters. The emphasis will be on avoiding the pitfalls of incomplete or unrepresentative approaches and ensuring future studies have valid and helpful outcomes. The new data, parameters and approaches come from the recently completed IAEA Coordinated  Research Project LAMER.
  • Presenters:  Sabine Charmasson (IRSN), Paul Mc Ginnity (IAEA), Mathew Johansen (ANSTO)

12:30 - 14:00
Room "Vieux-Port 500"
LUNCH BREAK

14:00 - 15:00
Room "Vieux-Port 300"
WORKSHOP : A NEW GLOBAL LOOK AT RADIONUCLIDES IN MARINE ORGANISMS AND SEAFOOD DOSE

14:45 - 16:45
Welcome desk
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
MARSEILLE GUIDED TOUR

15:30 - 17:30
Welcome desk
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
MARSEILLE GUIDED TOUR

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