
Fisheries Behavioral Ecology - Abstracts
DiMaria, R.A., Miller, J.A., and T.P. Hurst. 2010. Temperature and growth effects on otolith elemental
chemistry of larval Pacific cod, Gadus macrocephalus. Environmental Biology of Fishes 89:453-462.
Abstract
Variation in otolith elemental composition is used to investigatemovements of teleost fishes based on observations that otolith elemental composition reflects variation in water chemistry. Various environmental
(e.g., temperature, salinity, and water concentration) and biological (e.g., growth, diet, and ontogeny) factors can
influence otolith elemental incorporation although the relative influence of these factors remains poorly
understood for most species. Therefore, we examined the effects of temperature and growth rate on the otolith
elemental composition of larval Pacific cod, Gadus macrocephalus. The larvae were progeny of wild Pacific cod collected from spawning grounds near Kodiak Island, Alaska. Immediately after hatching,
larvae were acclimated to 2°C, 5°C, and 8°C and reared for 38–51 days. Otolith concentrations of Li,
Mg, Ca, Mn, Zn, Sr, and Ba were measured using laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry.
Li and Zn otolith concentrations were near detection limits and excluded from subsequent analyses.
The effects of temperature on otolith partition coefficients (DMe) varied among elements. DMg
showed no relationship with temperature whereas DSr and DBa decreased with increasing temperature. It is
possible that, for larval Pacific cod, kinetic effects are more important in the incorporation of Sr and Ba
whereas metabolic effects may play a larger role in the incorporation of Mg. There was no evidence for an
effect of somatic growth rate or otolith precipitation rate on DMe for any of the elements, which indicates
that individual growth variation is unlikely to lead to misinterpretation of field-collected data. Understanding
variable relationships among otolith elemental signatures, environmental conditions, and fish physiology
can improve the accuracy of interpretations of field data, particularly in marine systems where spatial
variation in element concentrations are typically lower than freshwater environments.
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Last updated
13 January, 2011
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