Relationship between habitat use and individual condition of European eel (Anguilla anguilla) in six estuaries of the eastern English Channel (North-eastern Atlantic ocean)

Brackish habitats are considered important for the facultatively catadromous European eel, but knowledge of eel habitat use strategies and the consequences on their condition, particularly in the estuaries areas, is limited and yet necessary for understanding some features such as growth and maturat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Estuarine, coastal and shelf science coastal and shelf science, 2023-09, Vol.291, p.108446, Article 108446
Hauptverfasser: Denis, Jérémy, Mahé, Kélig, Tabouret, Hélène, Rabhi, Khalef, Boutin, Kévin, Diop, Mamadou, Amara, Rachid
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container_start_page 108446
container_title Estuarine, coastal and shelf science
container_volume 291
creator Denis, Jérémy
Mahé, Kélig
Tabouret, Hélène
Rabhi, Khalef
Boutin, Kévin
Diop, Mamadou
Amara, Rachid
description Brackish habitats are considered important for the facultatively catadromous European eel, but knowledge of eel habitat use strategies and the consequences on their condition, particularly in the estuaries areas, is limited and yet necessary for understanding some features such as growth and maturation in the different habitats that eel inhabit during the continental phase, that might also support assessment and management of local stocks, and contribute to the stock-wide assessment of this panmictic species. This study aimed to characterise and compare the condition of European eels according to their habitat use strategies and local estuarine characteristics. Eels were collected along the salinity gradient in six small and medium-sized estuaries located along the French coast in the eastern English Channel (i.e. the Slack, Wimereux, Liane, Canche, Authie and Somme estuaries). Four condition indices (i.e. Fulton condition factor K, lipid content, hepatosomatic index and health status) were measured on 119 individuals to explore variation with habitat characteristics at the small geographical scale and their habitat use strategies. Eel condition showed clear spatial differences between the six estuaries, with better condition in smaller estuaries. The spatial differences in eel condition appear to be related to variations in their diet composition, corresponding to different availability of macrozoobenthos prey among sites, in turn due to the local hydro-morpho-sedimentary characteristics. Environmental history and movements were reconstructed from the Sr:Ca and Ba:Ca ratios of otoliths from eel samples (N = 37) in both small- and medium-sized estuaries. The Sr:Ca and Ba:Ca ratios were used to distinguish the habitat use strategies and showed that both estuaries had a high proportion of resident eels (81%). Within each estuary, the Sr:Ca and Ba:Ca ratios were sufficiently contrasted to track movements of estuarine resident eels between three resident sectors (i.e. upper, middle and lower estuary). The relationship between eel condition and habitat use showed that inter-habitat shifter eels were in poorer condition than estuarine residents. Eel condition also varied between the three resident sectors, with decreases between eels from the lower to upper estuaries. •Habitat use and movement reconstructed from the Sr and Ba otoliths.•Otolith microchemistry confirms high estuarine residence.•Otolith elemental composition to track eel movements between resident
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subjects Analytical chemistry
Biodiversity and Ecology
Chemical Sciences
Environmental history
Environmental Sciences
Fulton condition factor K
Health status
Hepatosomatic index
Life Sciences
Lipid content
Otolith microchemistry
title Relationship between habitat use and individual condition of European eel (Anguilla anguilla) in six estuaries of the eastern English Channel (North-eastern Atlantic ocean)
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