Are Canadian fish being poisoned by radiation? 
By Andrew Masterson CA Source: cosmosmagazine 6/11/2017
Andrew Masterson
A news story has done the rounds on social media this year claiming that salmon in Canada had been found contaminated with radioactive isotopes from the damaged nuclear power plant at Fukushima in Japan.

Is it true? And, if so, is there anything to worry about? The answer to the first question is “yes, sort of”, but the answer to the second is “definitely not”!

The story grew from the fact that, in 2015, a single salmon caught in Osoyoos Lake in British Columbia was found to contain very low levels of a radioactive isotope called caesium-134.
 

The isotope is produced during nuclear fission – the process that drives both atomic power stations and atomic bombs. Because it has a half-life of about two years, any caesium-134 that was released into the atmosphere by previous bomb tests or reactor disasters (such as Chernobyl) has long since decayed away.

Therefore, any caesium-134 found in anything at the moment can only have come from Fukushima.

So, yes, a radioactive nasty from Japan did end up in a fish in Canada. However, there is much more to the story than that.

First off, scientists have always predicted that radioactive stuff from the damaged reactor would spread around the world, through the oceans and the air.

 
Salmon, Kokanee Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4551How do you train a fish?BBC News 2009-10-02US
4552A New Chemical Method For Distinguishing Between Farmed And Wild Salmonunderwatertimes2009-09-30UK
4553Something fishy happening at Centennial Parksmh2009-09-21AU
4554Fishing for prehistoric quarrybbc2009-08-19US
4555Robotic Applications Eyed As Scientists Decode Mathematics Behind Fish's Lateral-line Systemunderwatertimes2009-08-28CA
4556Seafood surprise: could rebranding this ugly fish as ‘Cornish sole’ make Brits eat it?the guardian2021-02-09UK
4557Florida fishermen catch a Warsaw Grouper that was bigger than a man: ‘It was a monster’Fox News2021-02-17US
4558Four-year study suggests only a third of tagged fish made it through Whitehorse fish ladderyukon news2021-02-09CA
4559Orchid Islanders face charges for catching endangered fish in TaiwanTaiwan News2021-02-10TW
4560Invasive Asian carp is getting a new name and a public makeover to draw more eatersusatoday2009-02-08US
4561Crackdown on illegal fish nettingbbc2009-08-17UK
4562Corps scrambling to turn up voltage on carp barrierJournal Sentinel2009-11-08US
4563Angler's catch weighs more than his boatal2009-03-28US
4564The tiddler who caught a monster: Schoolgirl angler nets record catch that's twice her size and weighs 14stoneDaily Mail2009-07-15UK
4565The Alligator Gar Is One Ugly Fish, With Few Friends but New FansThe Wall Street2009-07-30US
4566Huge Fish, Once Believed Extinct, Isn’t the ‘Living Fossil’ Scientists Thoughtgizmodo2021-02-10AU
4567Hundreds of fish species, including many that humans eat, are consuming plastictheconversation2021-02-09CA
4568One Million Dollar 1st Prize in US Amateur Fishing Tournamentfishncanada2021-02-08US
4569Late ice cramps anglers' appetite, research of crucial fishCTV News2021-02-15CA
4570Pandemic triggers ‘widespread upheaval’ in global fisheries and aquacultureun.org2021-02-02GY
4571Common Fish Species Has 'Human' Ability To Learn; 'Brain Size Isn't Everything'Underwatertimes2009-07-16US
4572Fish Show Evolution Can Occur In Less Than Ten YearsUnderwatertimes2009-07-11US
4573Hatchery Fish May Hurt Efforts To Sustain Wild Salmon Runs; 'The Data Are Now Pretty Clear'Underwatertimes2009-07-10US
4574‘Big day for UK seas’ as bottom trawling ban in four protected areas proposedthe guardian2021-02-02UK
4575Musquash River may again be home to hydro powerCBC News2015-09-04CA

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