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Journal article

It’s elemental, my dear Watson: validating seasonal patterns in otolith chemical chronologies

From

National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark1

Section for Oceans and Arctic, National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark2

Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland3

Lund University4

SUNY - The State University of New York5

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences6

Johann Heinrich von Thunen Institute7

National Marine Fisheries Research Institute8

Accurate age data is essential for reliable fish stock assessment. Yet many stocks suffer from inconsistencies in age interpretation. A new approach to obtain age makes use of the chemical composition of otoliths. This study validates the periodicity of recurrent patterns in 25Mg, 31P, 34K, 55Mn, 63Cu, 64Zn, 66Zn, 85Rb, 88Sr, 138Ba, and 208Pb in Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) otoliths from tag-recapture and known-age samples.

Otolith P concentrations showed the highest consistency in seasonality over the years, with minima co-occurring with otolith winter zones in the known-age otoliths and in late winter/early spring when water temperatures are coldest in tagged cod . The timing of minima differs between stocks, occurring around February in western Baltic cod and one month later in eastern Baltic cod; seasonal maxima are also stock-specific, occurring in August and October, respectively.

The amplitude in P is larger in faster-growing western compared to eastern Baltic cod. Seasonal patterns with minima in winter/late spring were also evident in Mg and Mn, but less consistent over time and fish size than P. Chronological patterns in P, and to a lesser extent Mg and Mn, may have the potential to supplement traditional age estimation or to guide the visual identification of translucent and opaque otolith patterns used in traditional age estimation.

Language: English
Publisher: NRC Research Press
Year: 2021
Pages: 551-566
ISSN: 12057533 and 0706652x
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1139/cjfas-2020-0388
ORCIDs: Hüssy, Karin and Krüger-Johnsen, Maria

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