Otolith elemental signatures can be used to identify when individual or groups of fish are spending a significant amount of time in different environments. Elemental signatures of juvenile sardine Sardinops sagax caught in winter 2008 and 2009 around the coast of South Africa were measured using inductively-coupled plasma mass-spectroscopy. The otolith elemental signatures of 34 fish caught in 2008 and of 52 fish caught in 2009 were measured at the edge (to represent conditions 20-30 days prior to capture). Principal component analysis was used to visualise the relationships of individuals to each other, in terms of their otolith chemistry, in two-dimensional space, and multiple ANOVAs were used to investigate spatial and temporal variation...
The chemical composition of fish otoliths reflects that of the water masses that they inhabit. Otoli...
International audienceOtolith elemental composition analysis has become a powerful tool to study fis...
Most studies that infer geographic distributions of fish using otolith microchemistry assume that en...
Otolith elemental signatures can be used to identify when individual or groups of fish are spending ...
© 2002 NRC CanadaInterannual variability in elemental composition of otoliths may confound spatial i...
The chemical composition of fish otoliths can provide valuable information for determining the nurse...
We examined variability in otolith chemistry of wild caught fish in relation to in situ temperature ...
We examined otolith chemistry of age-0 red snapper Lutjanus campechanus in U.S. waters of the northe...
Estimating connectivity between juvenile and adult fish habitats can provide an important contributi...
Otolith chemistry has been successfully used to reconstruct the environmental history experienced by...
Characterizing the behavior of larvae prior to settlement is integral to understanding population dy...
Connectivity between estuarine and coastal populations is poorly understood but fundamental to the s...
We tested whether estuarine fishes have site-specific differences in the concentrations of trace ele...
Otolith chemistry has been widely used as a natural tag for determining environmental histories of f...
The Brazilian sardine (Sardinella brasiliensis) supports the most important pelagic fishery in the s...
The chemical composition of fish otoliths reflects that of the water masses that they inhabit. Otoli...
International audienceOtolith elemental composition analysis has become a powerful tool to study fis...
Most studies that infer geographic distributions of fish using otolith microchemistry assume that en...
Otolith elemental signatures can be used to identify when individual or groups of fish are spending ...
© 2002 NRC CanadaInterannual variability in elemental composition of otoliths may confound spatial i...
The chemical composition of fish otoliths can provide valuable information for determining the nurse...
We examined variability in otolith chemistry of wild caught fish in relation to in situ temperature ...
We examined otolith chemistry of age-0 red snapper Lutjanus campechanus in U.S. waters of the northe...
Estimating connectivity between juvenile and adult fish habitats can provide an important contributi...
Otolith chemistry has been successfully used to reconstruct the environmental history experienced by...
Characterizing the behavior of larvae prior to settlement is integral to understanding population dy...
Connectivity between estuarine and coastal populations is poorly understood but fundamental to the s...
We tested whether estuarine fishes have site-specific differences in the concentrations of trace ele...
Otolith chemistry has been widely used as a natural tag for determining environmental histories of f...
The Brazilian sardine (Sardinella brasiliensis) supports the most important pelagic fishery in the s...
The chemical composition of fish otoliths reflects that of the water masses that they inhabit. Otoli...
International audienceOtolith elemental composition analysis has become a powerful tool to study fis...
Most studies that infer geographic distributions of fish using otolith microchemistry assume that en...