No radioactive contamination from the Chernobyl disaster in Hungarian white truffles (Tuber magnatum)
Abstract
Despite being one of the most expensive gourmet foods, it remains unclear if the iconic White Truffle (Tuber magnatum Pico; hereinafter WT) accumulates radioactivity at harmful levels comparable to other fungal species. Here, we measure the active radiocaesium-137 concentration (137Cs) in ten hypogeous WT fruitbodies from southern Hungary, and the soils in which they were growing. All WTs reveal non-significant 137Cs values, thus providing an 'all clear' for WT hunters in the species' northernmost habitats, where corresponding soil samples occasionally exhibit slight 137Cs concentrations. Our results are particularly relevant in the light of a rapidly increasing global demand for WTs and their subsequent trading extent and price inflation, because up to 600 kg of fresh fruitbodies are harvested each year in southern Hungary. Moreover, some of Europe's forest ecosystems, in which mushroom picking is common practise, are still contaminated with 137Cs from the Chernobyl fallout more than 30 years ago, posing a serious threat to human health.
- Publication:
-
Environmental Pollution
- Pub Date:
- September 2019
- DOI:
- 10.1016/j.envpol.2019.06.108
- Bibcode:
- 2019EPoll.252.1643B
- Keywords:
-
- Central Europe;
- Chernobyl disaster;
- Environmental contamination;
- Fungal ecology;
- Food toxicology;
- Radioactive pollution;
- Radiocaesium-137;
- Truffle fruitbodies