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Longevity in maternal transmission of isotopic marks in a tropical freshwater rainbowfish and the implications for offspring morphology

Authors :
Danswell Starrs
Stephen Eggins
Brendan C. Ebner
Christopher J. Fulton
Source :
Marine and Freshwater Research. 65:400
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
CSIRO Publishing, 2014.

Abstract

Transgenerational marking is increasingly being used to study the early life history, biology and ecology of fishes. However, the timeframe over which the injected enriched stable isotopes remain in the mother and are passed onto her offspring is largely unknown. Similarly, we have relatively little knowledge of the effects of isotope labelling on the morphology of offspring. In this study, we injected adult female eastern rainbowfish (Melanotaenia splendida) with two doses (20mgg � 1 and 40mgg � 1 ) of enriched 137 Ba or 87 Sr stable isotopes to mark the otoliths of their larvae and examine the effects of isotope labelling on larvae morphology. Isotope ratios in larval otoliths were significantly different from controls in larvae hatched up to 174 days post-injection, indicating that enriched isotopes can mark the larvae of this daily spawningspeciesupto6monthsafterasingleinjection.Isotope-markedlarvaedisplayedvariable,butgenerallyincreased physical size, indicating that enriched stable isotope labelling may have some unintended effects on larvae morphology. Consequently, transgenerational marking provides a long-term tool for marking the offspring of M. splendida to disentangle their patterns of survivorship and dispersal, with the caveat that such studies should be interpreted in light of potential isotope-related changes in offspring morphology. Additional keywords: early life history, fitness, LA-ICPMS, mark-recapture, Melanotaenidae.

Details

ISSN :
13231650
Volume :
65
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Marine and Freshwater Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7a047f06bd3df199ecdff3db3b18667c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1071/mf13150