4.4 Article

Stable hydrogen isotopic composition of fishes reflects that of their environment

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES
Volume 63, Issue 8, Pages 1746-1751

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING, NRC RESEARCH PRESS
DOI: 10.1139/F06-076

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Otolith microchemistry and isotopic analyses have emerged as effective techniques for providing insights into fish environmental history that are difficult to obtain by other means. Stable hydrogen isotope ratio (H-2/H-1 or D/H, expressed as delta D) is a possible environmental marker that has not been employed in fish provenance research, although it has been applied as a natural tracer of terrestrial organism migrations. We illustrate the potential of delta D to serve as a new natural marker of fish environmental history by demonstrating that significant linear relationships (r(2) >= 0.97) exist between fish otolith and muscle delta D and delta D of waters that fish inhabit. Differences between mean water delta D and both muscle and otolith delta D were not significantly correlated with fish total length and were not significantly different among species, indicating that water-fish delta D relationships are consistent across fish sizes and species. High r(2) values for regressions of otolith and muscle delta D on water delta D for fishes inhabiting locations with diverse thermal regimes suggest that relationships between water and fish delta D are not strongly affected by water temperature. Demonstration that fish delta D clearly reflects water delta D provides a foundation for future research to reconstruct fish movement among locations with distinct delta D signatures.

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