Affiliation:
1. Regional Environment Conservation Division National Institute for Environmental Studies Ibaraki Japan
2. Agricultural Radiation Research Center, Tohoku Agricultural Research Center National Agriculture and Food Research Organization Fukushima Japan
3. The City of Hiroshima Hiroshima Japan
4. Water and Geo‐Environment Division Center for Environmental Science in Saitama Saitama Japan
5. Fukushima Regional Collaborative Research Center National Institute for Environmental Studies Fukushima Japan
Abstract
AbstractA two‐stage sampler was designed to investigate the vertical distribution of heavy metals and trace elements that contaminate forest soils through atmospheric deposition. The hand‐corer consisted of two L‐shaped aluminum angles that were driven separately into the soil to reduce friction between the corer wall and the soil. This allowed for soil cores to be collected with less compression than with traditional corers. The corer is easily made, inexpensive, lightweight, and easy to carry. The degree of compression of soil cores collected at a depth of 20 cm from various montane forests in Japan was usually less than 10% (collected core length >18 cm); although, more compression occurred in soil with a higher air content. The degree of compression of soil cores collected from urban forests was lower than that in montane forests. When the two‐stage sampler was compared with a tube‐type sampler in a Japanese cedar (Cryptomeria japonica) forest, the compression degree of a soil core collected with the two‐stage sampler was a quarter that of the tube‐type sampler. The collection of less‐compressed soil cores will allow for reconstruction of a more accurate linear depth distribution of contaminants. To demonstrate this, we investigated the vertical distribution of Pb, Sb, and radioactive 137Cs in soil cores collected from conifer plantations on Mount Tsukuba, Japan, in April 2011. The migration centers of anthropogenic Pb, Sb, and 137Cs were positioned at 7.9, 7.5, and 3.3 cm from the ground surface, respectively. These distances probably reflect differences in the history of atmospheric pollution.