Reconnaissance Survey of Radioisotopes in Soil and Possible Impact on Seasonal Anthrax Outbreak at Etosha National Park, Namibia

Authors

  • Martin Hipondoka
  • B. Mauz
  • E.M. Nande
  • J. Bezuidenhout

Abstract

Recent discovery of elevated concentrations of uranium and thorium in sediments of the Etosha Pan prompted this reconnaissance study to survey radionuclides for their possible impact on seasonal anthrax outbreaks in habitats adjacent to the pan. Plausible explanation about how animals contract anthrax is yet to be established. Because anthrax spores are non-invasive, one of the preconditions suggested for the initiation of infection is a lesion, which serves as entry point into tissue of the organism. Five samples taken from sediments at waterholes/depressions situated downwind of the pan, where the highest density of anthrax-related deaths occurs, were analysed in the laboratory using a gamma spectrometry. All sites sampled contain concentration of radionuclides higher than the crustal average, and the highest activity concentration of 93 Bq/kg 214Bi and 214Pb, for example, was recorded closest to the Etosha Pan. This suggests that the pan is the source of uranium, and thus possible that radionuclides are redistributed from the pan by prevailing wind, mobilized seasonally by running water and collected in pools in which animals drink. Alpha-emitting radionuclides can damage the renal, gastrointestinal and/or respiratory systems of exposed animals. Incurred damage is hypothesized as a likely mechanism under which spores are aided to enter the host for infection.

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Published

2014-06-27

How to Cite

Hipondoka, M., Mauz, B., Nande, E., & Bezuidenhout, J. (2014). Reconnaissance Survey of Radioisotopes in Soil and Possible Impact on Seasonal Anthrax Outbreak at Etosha National Park, Namibia. International Science and Technology Journal of Namibia, 059–069. Retrieved from https://journals.unam.edu.na/index.php/ISTJN/article/view/1119

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Articles