Bm. Gillanders et Mj. Kingsford, Elemental fingerprints of otoliths of fish may distinguish estuarine 'nursery' habitats, MAR ECOL-PR, 201, 2000, pp. 273-286
The elemental fingerprints or composition of otoliths of fish may provide a
natural tag of the 'nursery' habitat of juvenile fish. The natural tag cou
ld then be used to determine the 'nursery' habitat of adult fish found on c
oastal reefs. We collected juvenile Pelates sexlineatus from 2 to 5 sites w
ithin each of 7 estuaries to determine whether elemental composition of oto
liths differed among estuaries and among sites within estuaries. In additio
n, fish were collected in 2 successive years to determine whether temporal
differences may be found in elemental fingerprints that could then confound
subsequent assignment of adults to 'nursery' estuaries. Significant differ
ences in elemental fingerprints (Sr, Ba and Mn) were found within and among
estuaries, but there was often an interaction with time suggesting that th
ere were differences among estuaries/sites but the difference varied betwee
n times. Quadratic discriminant functions (QDFs) generated to discriminate
among estuaries suggested that the QDFs calculated from a single year class
were more successful at assigning fish to the correct estuary than either
(1) QDFs based on both years combined or (2) using the QDFs generated from
the first year class to classify the second year class. Small-scale variabi
lity among sites within an estuary suggested that for an estuarine fishery
we may be able to classify fish to their site of origin; this warrants furt
her investigation. Adult fish from a coastal fishery can now be assigned to
their 'nursery' estuary by analysing the juvenile region of their otoliths
, provided that discriminant functions are generated from the appropriate y
ear class of recruits.