Otolith radiocarbon signatures provide distinct migration history of walleye pollock around Hokkaido, Japan in the North‐Western Pacific

Author:

Ando Kozue12ORCID,Yokoyama Yusuke12345,Miyairi Yosuke1,Sakai Osamu6,Hamatsu Tomonori6,Yamashita Yuuho7,Chimura Masayuki6,Nagata Toshi1

Affiliation:

1. Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute The University of Tokyo Kashiwa Japan

2. Department of Earth and Planetary Science The University of Tokyo Hongo Japan

3. Graduate Program on Environmental Sciences The University of Tokyo Komaba Japan

4. Department of Biogeochemistry Japan Agency for Marine‐Earth Science and Technology Yokosuka Japan

5. Research School of Physics The Australian National University Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australia

6. Fisheries Resources Institute (Kushiro) Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency Kushiro Japan

7. Fisheries Resources Institute (Yokohama) Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency Yokohama Japan

Abstract

AbstractTrace elements and stable isotope ratios in otoliths have been used as proxies for the migration history of teleosts; however, their application in oceanic fishes remains limited. This study reports the first use of radiocarbons in otoliths to evaluate the horizontal migration histories of an oceanic fish species, the walleye pollock Gadus chalcogrammus. We conducted radiocarbon analyses of three stocks sourced from Hokkaido, Japan. The radiocarbon concentrations from the outermost portion of the otoliths from the Japanese Pacific, Northern Japan Sea (JS), and Southern Okhotsk Sea (OS) stocks were in general agreement with the seawater radiocarbon concentration of the sampling region, suggesting that pollock of all three stocks generally inhabited the within the sea region where each pollocks were sampled throughout their life cycle. However, the radiocarbon signals also provided some indications that some JS and OS stocks may be migrating between different sea regions. The proposed novel approach of reconstructing the individual migration history of marine fish using radiocarbon in otoliths may help examine fish migration with a higher temporal and spatial resolution that could not be achieved by trace elements and stable isotope ratios.

Funder

Japan Science and Technology Agency

Fisheries Agency

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

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