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Dive into the research topics where P. McDonald is active.

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Featured researches published by P. McDonald.


Remote Sensing of Environment | 2003

Mapping intertidal estuarine sediment grain size distributions through airborne remote sensing

Michael P Rainey; Andrew N. Tyler; David Gilvear; Robert G. Bryant; P. McDonald

Abstract The intertidal environments of estuaries represent critical exchange environments of sediment and sediment bound contaminants. Ecological and sedimentological related investigations of these environments require monitoring methods that provide rapid spatially representative data on sediment grain size distribution. Remote sensing has the potential to provide synoptic information of intertidal environments. Previous in situ and laboratory-based reflectance investigations have demonstrated that for effective quantification of sediment grain size distributions, remote sensing platforms must include measurements within the short-wave infrared (SWIR). In addition, the timing of image acquisition, in relation to tidal cycles and sediment moisture content, is critical in optimising the spectral differences between the coarser sand and finer ‘mud’ fraction of sediments. Daedalus 1268 Airborne Thematic Mapper (ATM) has been identified as an appropriate platform and sensor for providing accurate synoptic maps of estuarine sediment distributions. This paper presents the results from the application of ATM 1.75 m resolution data to the mapping of surface sediment grain-size distributions across intertidal areas of Ribble Estuary, Lancashire, UK. ATM imagery was acquired after the intertidal area was exposed to strong summer drying conditions. Pre-processing and linear unmixing of the imagery collected of the intertidal zone following a period of drying allowed accurate sub-pixel determinations (1.75 m resolution) of sediment clay (r2=0.79) but less accurate for sand (r2=0.60). The results also demonstrate deterioration in the image calibration with increasing sediment moisture content and microphytobenthos cover. However, recombining the subpixel end member abundances through multivariate regression analysis improved the image calibration significantly for both sediment clay and sand content (r2>0.8) for imagery collected in both dryer and wetter conditions. These results demonstrate that ATM data, or similar, can be used to gain quantitative information on intertidal sediment distributions and such data has application to a wide variety of estuarine research.


International Journal of Remote Sensing | 2000

The influence of surface and interstitial moisture on the spectral characteristics of intertidal sediments: Implications for airborne image acquisition and processing

M. P. Rainey; Andrew N. Tyler; Robert G. Bryant; David Gilvear; P. McDonald

Intertidal sediment distribution is an important factor in the understanding of estuarine ecological, morphological and pollution processes. Airborne remote sensing is identified as a cost-effective tool that may be used to provide accurate synoptic maps of estuarine sediment distributions. However, prior to the collection and analysis of airborne imagery, spectral characterization of intertidal sediments is fundamental. Through a series of in situ


Journal of Environmental Radioactivity | 2008

Dynamic model for the assessment of radiological exposure to marine biota

J. Vives i Batlle; R.C. Wilson; S. J. Watts; Steve R Jones; P. McDonald; S. Vives-Lynch

A generic approach has been developed to simulate dynamically the uptake and turnover of radionuclides by marine biota. The approach incorporates a three-compartment biokinetic model based on first order linear kinetics, with interchange rates between the organism and its surrounding environment. Model rate constants are deduced as a function of known parameters: biological half-lives of elimination, concentration factors and a sample point of the retention curve, allowing for the representation of multi-component release. The new methodology has been tested and validated in respect of non-dynamic assessment models developed for regulatory purposes. The approach has also been successfully tested against research dynamic models developed to represent the uptake of technetium and radioiodine by lobsters and winkles. Assessments conducted on two realistic test scenarios demonstrated the importance of simulating time-dependency for ecosystems in which environmental levels of radionuclides are not in equilibrium.


International Journal of Remote Sensing | 1996

A preliminary investigation into the spectral characteristics of inter-tidal estuarine sediments

Robert G. Bryant; Andrew N. Tyler; David Gilvear; P. McDonald; I. Teasdale; J. Brown; G. Ferrier

Abstract In the Ribble Estuary, Lancashire, U.K., systematic associations between discharge of radionuclides from the British Nuclear Fuels plc (BNFL) plants at Sellafield and Springfields and sediment size-fractions exist. The ability to map these associations through in situ spectroscopy (0·4-2·5 μm) of sediments at low tide was investigated. Laboratory spectra of inter-tidal sediment samples collected from the Ribble show a strong negative correlation (–0·7 to –0·8) between their radionuclide-associated clay content and reflectance within the 0·4-2·5 μm range. Field spectra of the same samples showed a less distinct relationship as a result of the presence of surface moisture, cyanobacteria, and halite within the intertidal zone. Methods are proposed to account for these problems.


Science of The Total Environment | 2001

The availability of plutonium and americium in Irish Sea sediments for re-dissolution

P. McDonald; J. Vives i Batlle; A Bousher; A Whittall; N Chambers

The availability of plutonium and americium, for re-dissolution from offshore sediments into Irish Sea water, has been examined. Sediments collected from the mud-patch near the Cumbrian coast were characterized in terms of spatial location, particle size, partitioning of radionuclides with respect to physico-chemical bonds and availability of actinides for release into seawater. Sequential extraction investigations revealed that plutonium was predominantly associated with strongly bound sesquioxide and organic complex fractions. Americium was associated mainly with the organic complex fraction, but a significant fraction was in carbonate form. Sediment/water re-dissolution experiments with and without stirring were compared to simulate the effect of disturbing bed sediment. After 1 week, neither set of re-dissolution data provided significant trends between dissolved activity and time. Stirred systems appeared to release 2.5 times more plutonium and americium into seawater than unstirred systems. Measured 239,240Pu and 241Am distribution coefficients (Kd values) were both typically approximately 10(5) l kg(-1). 241Am Kd values are an order of magnitude lower than previously reported for the north-eastern Irish Sea, but similar to western Irish Sea values. Overall, the fractions of plutonium and americium available for re-dissolution from bed sediment are very low at < 0.1%, with proportionally more plutonium being released than americium. These findings lend further support for the extrapolation of laboratory-derived information to environmental conditions.


Journal of Environmental Radioactivity | 2009

Laboratory and field studies of polonium and plutonium in marine plankton.

R.C. Wilson; S. J. Watts; J. Vives i Batlle; P. McDonald

Uptake experiments were successfully undertaken for polonium and plutonium in the marine diatom Skeletonema costatum. Experiments were complemented with a field study which yielded concentration factors for these radionuclides for plankton samples collected in the eastern Irish Sea. The uptake experiment produced uptake half times of 0.8 and 0.6 days for plutonium and polonium, respectively. Concentration factors of 3.1 x 10(5) l kg(-1) for plutonium and 2.4 x 10(5) l kg(-1) for polonium were consistent with those suggested by the IAEA for phytoplankton. Concentration factors derived from the field study were 2 x 10(3) l kg(-1) for plutonium and 1.4 x 10(4) l kg(-1) for polonium and were more consistent with IAEA values for zooplankton rather than phytoplankton. The maximum calculated dose rate due to Po and Pu in plankton sampled in the field was 0.12 microGyh(-1). In applying the laboratory-derived phytoplankton CF values for Po and Pu, higher dose rates, in the range 6-11 microGyh(-1), were calculated. The latter values are well below the UNSCEAR and IAEA review value of 400 microGyh(-1), and are also below the Environment Agency marine action level of 40 microGyh(-1).


Journal of Environmental Radioactivity | 2010

Modelling radioactivity in the Irish Sea: from discharge to dose.

Philippe Gleizon; P. McDonald

In order to support authorised discharges of low level radioactive liquid effluent into coastal regions, mathematical models are required to robustly predict radiological impacts on critical groups of current and proposed changes to liquid discharges. The grid model presented here simulates the long term dispersion and transport of radioactivity discharged from the Sellafield site in Cumbria, UK, and the subsequent exposure of critical groups in Cumbria and across the Irish Sea in Northern Ireland. The fine grid of the model allows a good resolution of the seabed sediment distribution. This benefits the predictions for the last decades of low discharge level, when bed sediment can become a source of contamination by bringing back the legacy of past high discharges. This is highlighted by the dose comparison, where the predicted dose to Cumbria critical group follows well the dose estimated from environmental data during the low discharge level period.


Journal of Environmental Radioactivity | 2011

Estimating sediment and caesium-137 fluxes in the Ribble Estuary through time-series airborne remote sensing

Richard Wakefield; Andrew N. Tyler; P. McDonald; P A Atkin; Philippe Gleizon; David Gilvear

High spatial and temporal resolution airborne imagery were acquired for the Ribble Estuary, North West England in 1997 and 2003, to assess the application of time-series airborne remote sensing to quantify total suspended sediment and radionuclide fluxes during a flood and ebb tide sequence. Concomitant measurements of suspended particulate matter (SPM) and water column turbidity were obtained during the time-series image acquisition for the flood and ebb tide sequence on the 17th July 2003 to verify the assumption of a vertically well mixed estuary and thus justifying the vertical extrapolation of spatially integrated estimate of surface SPM. The ¹³⁷Cs activity concentrations were calculated from a relatively stable relationship between SPM and ¹³⁷Cs for the Ribble Estuary. Total estuary wide budgets of sediment and ¹³⁷Cs were obtained by combining the image-derived estimates of surface SPM and ¹³⁷Cs with estimates of water volume from a two-dimensional hydrodynamic model (VERSE) developed for the Ribble Estuary. These indicate that around 10,000 tons of sediment and 2.72 GBq of ¹³⁷Cs were deposited over the tidal sequence monitored in July 2003. This compared favourably with bed height elevation change estimated from field work. An uncertainty analysis on the total sediment and ¹³⁷Cs flux yielded a total budget of the order of 40% on the final estimate. The results represent a novel approach to providing a spatially integrated estimate of the total net sediment and radionuclide flux in an intertidal environment over a flood and ebb tide sequence.


Science of The Total Environment | 2010

Exposure of birds to radionuclides and other contaminants in Special Protection Areas (SPAs) in North-West England

K Marshall; Sarah Watson; P. McDonald; David Copplestone; Stephen J Watts

There has been a decline in the population of some bird species at Morecambe Bay and the Solway Firth Special Protected Areas in North-West England during the last fifty years. It was suggested that the declines were caused, in part, by contaminants in the food and environment, primarily from the radioactive effluent discharge from the Sellafield Ltd nuclear fuel reprocessing plant in Cumbria. This study analysed bird feathers and tissues, vegetation and sediment for radionuclides, metals and persistent organic compounds. The non-radionuclide results were all low compared to relevant action limits. The ERICA model was used with field data to estimate the radiological dose to birds from exposure to (137)Cs and (241)Am with results between 1.26 to 3.83 microGy h(-1), below the ERICA screening level of 10 microGy h(-1) and within the IAEA 40 microGy h(-1) guideline value below which potential adverse impacts on biota are unlikely. The study showed no link between bird population decline and anthropogenic discharges to the SPAs.


Radioactivity in the Environment | 2006

A biokinetic model for the uptake and depuration of radioiodine by the edible periwinkle Littorina littorea

J. Vives i Batlle; R.C. Wilson; P. McDonald; T.G. Parker

Abstract A dynamic model for the prediction of radioiodine concentrations in the edible periwinkle Littorina littorea following uptake from the marine environment has been developed and successfully tested. This model incorporates calibration information generated from both laboratory experiments and knowledge of the local ecosystem. Central to the design is a biokinetic sub-model for winkles containing compartments for the shell, gastro-intestinal tract, soft tissue and remainder. The model is found to reproduce uptake, depuration and basic internal distribution as experimentally observed for winkles exposed to radioiodine in both seawater or labelled red seaweed (Chondrus crispus). For winkles in the field the model approximates satisfactorily the available monitoring data for 129I in winkles from the west Cumbrian coast (UK), spanning several years. Use of the model in assessment mode predicts that, under the current discharge regime for 129I, consumption of local winkles and chronic exposure to the winkles themselves pose no radiological significance.

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A. Craze

Nuclear Decommissioning Authority

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M.S. Johnson

University of Liverpool

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