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  1. Article: Ontogenetic shift to dependence on salmon-derived nutrients in Dolly Varden char from the Iliamna River, Alaska

    Jaecks, Troy / Quinn, Thomas P

    Environmental biology of fishes. 2014 Dec., v. 97, no. 12

    2014  

    Abstract: The upstream migration, spawning, and death of anadromous, semelparous Pacific salmon brings nutrients to terrestrial and aquatic communities around the Pacific Rim. Many fishes use these resources but the relationship between fish body size and the ... ...

    Abstract The upstream migration, spawning, and death of anadromous, semelparous Pacific salmon brings nutrients to terrestrial and aquatic communities around the Pacific Rim. Many fishes use these resources but the relationship between fish body size and the reliance on salmon-derived nutrients might follow one of several patterns related to the onset of egg consumption with body size as fish grow, and possible shifts to alternative prey such as fishes as they grow larger still. In this study, these size-dependent hypotheses of marine subsidy use by resident Dolly Varden, Salvelinus malma, were tested using diet and stable isotope analyses. S. malma did not shift abruptly to a reliance on salmon eggs after they became large enough to eat eggs (i.e., no gape limitation). Rather, fish large enough to eat eggs but < 150 mm showed diets that blended salmon nutrients with aquatic insects, likely because they were spatially segregated from the highest concentration of spawning sockeye salmon, Oncorhynchus nerka. From intermediate through the largest sizes observed (150 to > 600 mm long) S. malma received ca. 80 % of their nutrients from salmon (eggs, flesh, and maggots that had scavenged dead salmon) based on diet analysis and stable isotope ratios despite being large enough to consume fish, as many similarly-sized salmonids do in other ecosystems. The few fish sampled in June, prior to the availability of salmon subsidies, had stable isotope signatures that also reflected heavy (ca. 90 %) reliance on marine sources, likely because they had eaten little since the end of the salmon run the previous fall. This apparent avoidance of piscivory in favor a rich yet pulsed marine subsidy highlights the importance of healthy salmon runs for the sake of not only the salmon but resident fishes that consume them.
    Keywords Oncorhynchus nerka ; Salvelinus ; aquatic communities ; aquatic insects ; body size ; death ; diet ; ecosystems ; eggs ; insect larvae ; nutrients ; rivers ; salmon ; spawning ; stable isotopes ; subsidies ; Alaska ; Pacific Rim
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2014-12
    Size p. 1323-1333.
    Publishing place Springer-Verlag
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 196790-3
    ISSN 1573-5133 ; 0378-1909
    ISSN (online) 1573-5133
    ISSN 0378-1909
    DOI 10.1007/s10641-014-0221-3
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  2. Article: Can dietary reliance on Pacific salmon eggs create otolith Sr/Ca signatures that mimic anadromy in resident salmonids?

    Jaecks, Troy / Morgan H. Bond / Thomas P. Quinn

    Environmental biology of fishes. 2016 Feb., v. 99, no. 2-3

    2016  

    Abstract: Many aspects of the ecology, growth, life history, and population dynamics of fishes differ between anadromous populations and those residing exclusively in freshwater habitats. Analysis of the elemental composition of otoliths (ear stones) is commonly ... ...

    Abstract Many aspects of the ecology, growth, life history, and population dynamics of fishes differ between anadromous populations and those residing exclusively in freshwater habitats. Analysis of the elemental composition of otoliths (ear stones) is commonly used to indicate the migration history of individuals, relying on the differences in ambient concentrations of calcium, strontium, and barium and their subsequent incorporation into calcified structures. Dietary contribution to otolith chemistry is often overlooked, but in this study we report results consistent with the possibility that reliance on food resources derived from the ocean via Pacific salmon can produce otolith Sr/Ca ratios suggesting anadromy in freshwater resident fish. Dolly Varden, Salvelinus malma, from the Iliamna River, Alaska feed very heavily on eggs and other tissues from sockeye salmon, Oncorhynchus nerka, and their otoliths had Sr/Ca ratios typical of fish making seasonal migrations to marine waters but the Ba/Ca ratios were consistent with residence in fresh water. Water samples from the river provided no indication that the elevated Sr concentrations came from the river. A simulation of otolith chemistry resulting from Sr incorporation from both water and diet across a range of published values in salmonids indicates that a diet of salmon eggs and tissues can produce marine Sr/Ca ratios while fish remain in fresh water. Without experimental evidence such as a controlled diet study these results are suggestive but not conclusive. Nevertheless, they send a cautionary note that in some cases heavy reliance on marine-derived food sources might affect otolith microchemistry, creating an appearance of anadromy in fish that did not leave fresh water.
    Keywords anadromous fish ; barium ; calcium ; diet study techniques ; eggs ; elemental composition ; freshwater ; habitats ; life history ; Oncorhynchus nerka ; otoliths ; population dynamics ; rivers ; salmon ; Salvelinus ; strontium ; tissues ; Alaska
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2016-02
    Size p. 237-247.
    Publishing place Springer Netherlands
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 196790-3
    ISSN 1573-5133 ; 0378-1909
    ISSN (online) 1573-5133
    ISSN 0378-1909
    DOI 10.1007/s10641-016-0470-4
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  3. Article: Ontogenetic shift to dependence on salmon-derived nutrients in Dolly Varden char from the Iliamna River, Alaska

    Jaecks, Troy / Quinn, Thomas P.

    Environmental biology of fishes

    Volume v. 97,, Issue no. 1

    Abstract: The upstream migration, spawning, and death of anadromous, semelparous Pacific salmon brings nutrients to terrestrial and aquatic communities around the Pacific Rim. Many fishes use these resources but the relationship between fish body size and the ... ...

    Abstract The upstream migration, spawning, and death of anadromous, semelparous Pacific salmon brings nutrients to terrestrial and aquatic communities around the Pacific Rim. Many fishes use these resources but the relationship between fish body size and the reliance on salmon-derived nutrients might follow one of several patterns related to the onset of egg consumption with body size as fish grow, and possible shifts to alternative prey such as fishes as they grow larger still. In this study, these size-dependent hypotheses of marine subsidy use by resident Dolly Varden, Salvelinus malma, were tested using diet and stable isotope analyses. S. malma did not shift abruptly to a reliance on salmon eggs after they became large enough to eat eggs (i.e., no gape limitation). Rather, fish large enough to eat eggs but < 150 mm showed diets that blended salmon nutrients with aquatic insects, likely because they were spatially segregated from the highest concentration of spawning sockeye salmon, Oncorhynchus nerka. From intermediate through the largest sizes observed (150 to > 600 mm long) S. malma received ca. 80 % of their nutrients from salmon (eggs, flesh, and maggots that had scavenged dead salmon) based on diet analysis and stable isotope ratios despite being large enough to consume fish, as many similarly-sized salmonids do in other ecosystems. The few fish sampled in June, prior to the availability of salmon subsidies, had stable isotope signatures that also reflected heavy (ca. 90 %) reliance on marine sources, likely because they had eaten little since the end of the salmon run the previous fall. This apparent avoidance of piscivory in favor a rich yet pulsed marine subsidy highlights the importance of healthy salmon runs for the sake of not only the salmon but resident fishes that consume them.
    Keywords aquatic communities ; diet ; death ; body size ; ecosystems ; rivers ; spawning ; stable isotopes ; Salvelinus ; nutrients ; eggs ; Oncorhynchus nerka ; subsidies ; salmon ; insect larvae ; aquatic insects
    Language English
    Document type Article
    ISSN 0378-1909
    Database AGRIS - International Information System for the Agricultural Sciences and Technology

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