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Data from: Unravelling the life-history of Amazonian fishes through otolith microchemistry

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DataONE2016-05-11 更新2024-06-26 收录
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Amazonian fishes employ diverse migratory strategies, but the details of these behaviors remain poorly studied despite numerous environmental threats and heavy commercial exploitation of many species. Otolith microchemistry offers a practical, cost-effective means of studying fish life-history in such a system. This study employed a multi-method, multi-elemental approach to elucidate the migrations of five Amazonian fishes: two ‘sedentary’ species (Arapaima sp. and Plagioscion squamosissimus), one ‘floodplain migrant’ (Prochilodus nigricans), and two long-distance migratory catfishes (Brachyplatystoma rousseauxii and B. filamentosum). The Sr:Ca and Zn:Ca patterns in Arapaima were consistent with its previously-observed sedentary life-history, while Sr:Ca and Mn:Ca indicated that Plagioscion may migrate among multiple, chemically-distinct environments during different life-history stages. Mn:Ca was found to be potentially useful as a marker for identifying Prochilodus’s transition from its nursery habitats into black water. Sr:Ca and Ba:Ca suggested that B. rousseauxii resided in the Amazon estuary for the first 1.5–2 years of life, shown by the simultaneous increase/decrease of otolith Sr:Ca/Ba:Ca, respectively. Our results further suggested that B. filamentosum did not enter the estuary during its life-history. These results introduce what should be a productive line of research desperately needed to better understand the migrations of these unique and imperiled fishes.
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2016-05-11
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