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Data from: Incremental analysis of vertebral centra can reconstruct the stable isotope chronology of teleost fishes

Cite this dataset

Matsubayashi, Jun et al. (2017). Data from: Incremental analysis of vertebral centra can reconstruct the stable isotope chronology of teleost fishes [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.r6p27

Abstract

1. Isotope analysis has high potential for understanding fish ecology and food-web structure in aquatic ecosystems. The utility of isotope analysis will be greatly improved if we can reconstruct the chronology of several isotopes at multiple growth stages of individual fish. However, no practical methods exist for reconstructing the chronology of light-element isotopes (e.g. δ13C, δ15N, δ34S, and Δ14C) in teleost fishes. Here, we present and test a new analytical approach for reconstructing the isotopic ratios of light isotopes at multiple life-stages in teleost fishes. 2. We sampled an anadromous salmon species, masu salmon Oncorhynchus masou (n = 3), along with water from its natal stream and from the ocean. We subdivided the vertebral centra of the salmon equally into 10 sections and extracted bone collagen from each sample. We then measured the stable sulfur isotope ratios of each vertebral section and compared them with δ34S values of the river water and sea water. We also measured the 87Sr/86Sr ratios of otoliths as a reference indicator of salmon migration between fresh water and the ocean. 3. In all samples, the bone section closest to the centre of the centrum had the lowest δ34S values, which were similar to those of fresh water. The δ34S values gradually increased from the centre to marginal sections, finally reaching constant values similar to those of seawater. The 87Sr/86Sr ratios of sagittal otolith sections had significant inter-individual differences and were consistent with the patterns of variation of the δ34S values of the vertebral sections. 4. Our results show that the vertebral centra of teleost fishes record isotopic information from juvenile to adult life-stages. We suggest that our method can provide reproducible isotopic chronology, even in teleost fishes smaller than 50 cm. This method can be used in isoscape studies and in studies of the ecology of marine teleost fishes.

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Location

Japan
Hokkaido