4.2 Article

Migratory behaviour and habitat use by American eels Anguilla rostrata as revealed by otolith microchemistry

Journal

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
Volume 233, Issue -, Pages 217-229

Publisher

INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/meps233217

Keywords

American eel; otolith; strontium; calcium ratio; environmental history

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The environmental history of American eels Anguilla rostrata from the East River, Nova Scotia, was investigated by electron microprobe analysis of the Sr:Ca ratio along transects of the eel otolith. The mean (+/- SD) Sr:Ca ratio in the otoliths of juvenile American eels was 5.42 x 10(-3) +/- 1.22 x 10(-3) at the elver check and decreased to 2.38 x 10(-3) +/- 0.99 X 10(-3) at the first annulus for eels that migrated directly into the river but increased to 7.28 x 10-3 +/- 1.09 X 10(-3) for eels that had remained in the estuary for I yr or more before entering the river. At the otolith edge, Sr:Ca ratios of 4.0 x 10(-3) or less indicated freshwater residence and ratios of 5,0 x 10(-3) or more indicated estuarine residence, Four distinct but interrelated behavioural groups were identified by the temporal changes in Sr:Ca ratios in their otoliths: (1) entrance into freshwater as an elver, (2) coastal or estuarine residence for I yr or more before entering freshwater, and, after entering freshwater, (3) continuous freshwater residence until the silver eel stage and (4) freshwater residence for 1 yr or more before engaging in periodic, seasonal movements between estuary and freshwater until the silver eel stage. Small (<70 mm total length), highly pigmented elvers that arrived early in the elver run were confirmed as slow growing age-1 juvenile eels, Juvenile eels that remained 1 yr or more in the estuary before entering the river contributed to the production of silver eels to a relatively greater extent than did elvers that entered the river during the year of continental arrival.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available