The use of otolith chemistry to characterize diadromous migrations

Chemical constituents in otoliths have become a valuable tool for fish ecologists seeking to reconstruct migratory patterns and life‐history diversity in a wide range of species worldwide. This approach has proved particularly effective with fishes that move across substantial salinity gradients ove...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of fish biology 2012-07, Vol.81 (2), p.796-825
Hauptverfasser: Walther, B. D., Limburg, K. E.
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Limburg, K. E.
description Chemical constituents in otoliths have become a valuable tool for fish ecologists seeking to reconstruct migratory patterns and life‐history diversity in a wide range of species worldwide. This approach has proved particularly effective with fishes that move across substantial salinity gradients over the course of their life, including many diadromous species. Freshwater endmembers of several elemental and isotope ratios (e.g. Sr:Ca, Ba:Ca and 87Sr:86Sr) are typically identifiably distinct from marine values, and often differ among freshwater tributaries at fine spatial scales. Because these chemical tags are generally incorporated in proportion to their ambient dissolved concentrations, they can be effective proxies for quantifying the presence, duration and frequency of movements between freshwater and marine habitats. The development of high precision probe‐based analytical techniques, such as laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP‐MS) and microbeam methods, has allowed researchers to glean increasingly detailed life‐history profiles of these proxies across otoliths. Researchers are also combining multiple chemical proxies in an attempt to refine interpretations of habitat residence patterns. A thorough understanding of the spatial and temporal variation in water chemistry as well as environmental and physiological controls on incorporation of specific elements into otoliths is required for confident estimation of lifetime salinity experience. First some assumptions, methodological considerations and data processing options that are particularly relevant to diadromous otolith chemistry studies are discussed. Insights into diadromous migrations obtained from decades of otolith chemistry research, highlighting the increasingly recognized importance of contingent behaviour and partial migration are then discussed. Finally, areas for future research and the need to integrate otolith chemistry studies into comprehensive assessments of the effects of global environmental change are identified.
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subjects anadromy
Animal Migration
Animals
Barium - analysis
catadromy
Chemistry
Ecosystem
Fishes - physiology
Fresh Water - chemistry
mixing curves
Otolithic Membrane - chemistry
Researchers
Salinity
Seawater - chemistry
stable isotopes
Strontium - analysis
trace elements
title The use of otolith chemistry to characterize diadromous migrations
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