2004
DOI: 10.1016/j.jembe.2003.10.004
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Incorporation of strontium into otoliths of an estuarine fish

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Cited by 228 publications
(221 citation statements)
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“…For juvenile blacktip sharks examined here, there were regional differences in Sr : Ca and Ba : Ca that were inversely related. However, it is difficult to attribute this pattern to regional differences in salinity without water chemistry data because the amount of Sr and Ba in freshwater end members will affect the amount of Sr and Ba available at a particular salinity (Wells et al 2003;Kraus and Secor 2004). Moreover, several factors, including growth rate, ontogeny, temperature and diet, can affect the relationship between water chemistry and element : Ca deposition in calcified structures (for a review, see Sturrock et al 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For juvenile blacktip sharks examined here, there were regional differences in Sr : Ca and Ba : Ca that were inversely related. However, it is difficult to attribute this pattern to regional differences in salinity without water chemistry data because the amount of Sr and Ba in freshwater end members will affect the amount of Sr and Ba available at a particular salinity (Wells et al 2003;Kraus and Secor 2004). Moreover, several factors, including growth rate, ontogeny, temperature and diet, can affect the relationship between water chemistry and element : Ca deposition in calcified structures (for a review, see Sturrock et al 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In general, the Sr concentration in otoliths of freshwater, estuarine, and anadromous fish species correlates positively with the salinity (e.g., Kraus andSecor 2004, Sturrock et al 2012); however, this relationship depends on the species and should be analyzed before being used in fish stock identification, connectivity, and migration studies. Particularly in marine species, the relationship between otolith Sr and salinity tends to be weak (Brown andSeverin 2009, Sturrock et al 2012).…”
Section: Los Alisos Dammentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In view of the positive relationship that exists between salinity and the strontium:calcium (Sr:Ca) ratio in water and some fish otoliths (Secor et al 1995, Zlokovitz et al 2003, Kraus and Secor 2004, Schuchert et al 2010, Tabouret et al 2010, studies relating water parameters (Sr:Ca and salinity) and the otolith Sr:Ca ratio have been able to identify fish stocks and migratory routes (e.g., Secor et al 1995;Zlokovitz et al 2003;Tabouret et al 2010;Avigliano et al 2015bAvigliano et al , 2015c. Otolith morphometrics are also used to identify fish stocks (e.g., Longmore et al 2010, Cañás et al 2012, Keating et al 2014.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sr and Ba are particularly suitable to reconstruct environmental history and infer migration patterns of diadromous fish (Campana 2005) since the concentration of Sr is substantially higher in seawater than in estuaries or freshwater ecosystems (Secor & Rooker 2000, Kraus & Secor 2004, while the opposite trend is observed for Ba (Elsdon & Gillanders 2006, Miller 2011. Variations of these relationships between otolith and ambient concentrations may occur as a function of fish physiology (Yamashita et al 2000) or local geology (Kraus & Secor 2004, Elsdon & Gillanders 2006. The combined analysis of Sr:Ca and Ba:Ca ratios along the growth plane of otoliths provides a powerful discriminative tool to retrospectively track fish migration and assign environments based on salinity.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%