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EGO to ECO: Tracing the History of Radioecology...
Journal article

EGO to ECO: Tracing the History of Radioecology from the 1950s to the Present Day

Abstract

This paper starts with a brief history of the birth of the field of radioecology during the Cold War with a focus on US activity. We review the establishment of the international system for radiation protection and the science underlying the guidelines. We then discuss the famous ICRP 60 statement that if "Man" is protected, so is everything else and show how this led to a focus in radioecology on pathways to "Man" rather than concern about impacts on environments or ecosystems. We then review the contributions of Radiation Research Society members and papers published in Radiation Research which contributed to the knowledge base about effects on non-human species. These fed into international databases and computer-based tools such as ERICA and ResRad Biota to guide regulators. We then examine the origins of the concern that ICRP 60 is not sufficient to protect ecosystems and discuss the establishment of ICRP Committee 5 and its recommendations to establish reference animals and plants. The review finishes with current concerns that reference animals and plants (RAPs) are not sufficient to protect ecosystems, given the complexity of interacting factors such as the climate emergency and discusses the efforts of ICRP, the International Union of Radioecologists and other bodies to capture the concepts of ecosystem services and ecosystem complexity modelling in radioecology.

Authors

Matarse BFE; Desai R; Oughton DH; Mothersill C

Journal

Radiation Research, Vol. 202, No. 2, pp. 273–288

Publisher

Radiation Research Society

Publication Date

August 1, 2024

DOI

10.1667/rade-24-00035.1

ISSN

0033-7587

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