Biological monitoring of solar UV radiation at 17 sites in Asia, Europe and South America from 1999 to 2004
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Authors
Munakata, N.
Cornain, S.
Kanoko, M.
Mulyadi, K.
Lestari, S.
Wirohadidjojo, W.
Bolsée, D.
Kazadzis, S.
Meyer-Rochow, V.
Schuch, N.
Casiccia, C.
Kaneko, M.
Liu, C.-M.
Jimbow, K.
Saida, T.
Nishigori, C.
Ogata, K.
Inafuku, K.
Hieda, K.
Ichihashi, M.
Discipline
Earth and related Environmental sciences
Subject
article
Asia
astronomy
Bacillus subtilis
environmental monitoring
Europe
genetic procedures
instrumentation
methodology
radiation exposure
South America
ultraviolet radiation
Asia
Bacillus subtilis
Biosensing Techniques
Environmental Monitoring
Europe
Solar System
South America
Ultraviolet Rays
Bacillus subtilis
Bacteria (microorganisms)
Audience
Scientific
Date
2006Metadata
Show full item recordDescription
A small and robust dosimeter for determining the biologically effective dose of ambient UV radiation has been developed using UV-sensitive mutant spores of Bacillus subtilis strain TKJ6312. A membrane filter with four spots of the spores was snapped to a slide mount. The slide was wrapped and covered with two or more layers of polyethylene sheet to protect the sample from rain and snow and to reduce monthly-cumulative doses within the measurable range. From 1999, monthly data were collected at 17 sites for more than 1 year, and data for 4 to 6 consecutive years were obtained from 12 sites. Yearly total values of the spore inactivation dose (SID) ranged from 3200 at subarctic Oulu to 96 000 at tropical Denpasar, and the mean yearly values of SID exhibited an exponential dependence on latitude in both hemispheres with a doubling for about every 14 degrees of change. During the observation period, increasing trends of UV doses have been observed at all sites with more than 5 years of data available. Year-to-year variations at high and middle latitude sites are considered due mostly to climatic variation. At three tropical sites, negative correlations between the yearly doses and the column ozone amounts were observed. The results verified the applicability of spore dosimetry for global and long-time monitoring of solar UV radiation, in particular at tropical sites where no monitoring is taking place.
Citation
Munakata, N.; Cornain, S.; Kanoko, M.; Mulyadi, K.; Lestari, S.; Wirohadidjojo, W.; Bolsée, D.; Kazadzis, S.; Meyer-Rochow, V.; Schuch, N.; Casiccia, C.; Kaneko, M.; Liu, C.-M.; Jimbow, K.; Saida, T.; Nishigori, C.; Ogata, K.; Inafuku, K.; Hieda, K.; Ichihashi, M. (2006). Biological monitoring of solar UV radiation at 17 sites in Asia, Europe and South America from 1999 to 2004. , Photochemistry and Photobiology, Vol. 82, Issue 3, 689-694, DOI: 10.1562/2005-07-07-RA-602.Identifiers
scopus: 2-s2.0-33745866243
Type
Article
Peer-Review
Yes
Language
eng