Strontium:cakium concentration ratios in otoliths of herring larvae as indicators of environmental histories |
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Authors: | Richard L. Radtke David W. Townsend Scott D. Folsom Melissa A. Morrison |
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Affiliation: | (1) Hawaii Institute of Geophysics, Oceanic Biology Division, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, HI, 96822, U.S.A.;(2) Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, McKown Point, W. Boothbay Harbor, Maine, 04575, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Synopsis Elemental analyses, using wave-length dispersive electron microprobe techniques on otoliths from reared Atlantic herring larvae, Clupea harengus, showed trace quantities of strontium relative to that of calcium, and an inverse relationship between Sr/Ca concentration ratios and rearing temperature. These data are consistent with those for coral aragonite, in that there appears to be an inverse temperature effect on physiological incorporation of strontium in the otolith aragonite. Our determinations of Sr/Ca concentration ratios of lab-reared herring larvae showed that the deposition of strontium relative to calcium and the rearing temperature were related, where: T (° C) = −2.955 [Sr/Ca] × 1000 ± 19.172. This principle thus makes it possible to use Sr/Ca concentration ratios in fish otoliths to delineate past temperatures experienced by an individual. Further, combining electron microprobe analyses with scanning electron microscope (SEM) examinations of daily increments in the same otolith makes it possible to reconstruct the temperature history for an individual fish on a time scale of days. An example of the application of the technique to an approximately six-month-old field-caught herring larva is given, and the limitations of the technique are discussed. |
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Keywords: | herring otolith Sr/Ca concentration ratios increments |
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