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Articles

Habitat Fingerprints for Lake Superior Coastal Wetlands Derived from Elemental Analysis of Yellow Perch Otoliths

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Pages 692-704 | Received 16 May 2003, Accepted 19 Nov 2003, Published online: 09 Jan 2011
 

Abstract

Assessing the ecological importance of coastal habitats to Great Lakes ecosystems requires an understanding of the ecological linkages between coastal and offshore waters. Elemental analysis of fish otoliths has emerged as a powerful technique that can provide a natural tag for determining nursery area affiliation, population structure, and movement of individual fish. Since the elemental composition of fish otoliths reflects some of the environmental conditions under which a fish was reared, otolith chemistry can record differences in ambient water conditions specific to habitats used during a fish's life history. Although few studies have been conducted in freshwaters, trace element analysis of marine fish otoliths has proven useful in identifying the chemical signatures unique to particular spawning and nursery habitats. To examine the utility of this method in freshwater, sagittae were removed from 275 young-of-the-year yellow perch Perca flavescens captured from eight wetlands in western Lake Superior during August 2001. They were analyzed for Ca and 13 minor and trace elements using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICPMS) and inductively coupled atomic emission mass spectrometry (ICPAES). Otolith concentrations of Ba, K, Mg, Mn, Na, and Sr differed significantly among wetlands (ANOVA, P < 0.001). Interwetland differences were also pronounced when analyzed as a multivariate fingerprint (MANOVA, P < 0.001). Discriminant function analysis revealed relatively distinct chemical fingerprints associated with each wetland. Wetland classification accuracy based on a five-element model (Sr, Mn, K, Ba, and Mg) ranged from 62% to 100% and averaged 76%. Differences in fingerprints between wetland types (river-influenced versus lagoon) were also distinct (MANOVA, P < 0.001). Classification accuracy for wetland type was 81% based on a five-element model that included Ba, Mg, Mn, Na, and Sr. Our results suggest that otolith elemental fingerprints may be useful for quantifying the relative contributions of different wetland nursery areas to recruitment in adjacent lake populations.

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