Unmasking continental natal homing in goliath catfish from the upper Amazon

Amazonian goliath catfishes are widespread in the Amazon Basin. Recently, otolith 87Sr:86Sr analyses using laser ablation–multi‐collector–inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA‐MC‐ICPMS) revealed a >8,000 km trans‐Amazonian natal homing in Brachyplatystoma rousseauxii among fish caught and hatched in the largest Amazon River tributary, the upper Madeira basin. Although also suspected for fish in the upper Amazon, homing could not be demonstrated owing to less distinct environmental 87Sr:86Sr gradients along the Amazon mainstem. Using scanning X‐ray fluorescence microscopy (SXFM), a separate study provided evidence that Se:Ca and Sr:Ca are useful markers for identifying migration into Andean headwaters and the estuarine environment. We analysed otoliths of known 87Sr:86Sr profiles using SXFM mapping to test if Sr:Ca and Se:Ca patterns could demonstrate natal homing for three fish caught in the upper Amazon, using as reference two individuals that were natal homers and two forced residents (hatched after the construction of hydroelectric dams on the Madeira River) from the upper Madeira River. As hypothesised, although the Sr isotope profiles of the upper Amazon individuals were uninformative, two of them presented similar alternating mirror patterns of Sr:Ca and Se:Ca to those of the upper Madeira natal homers, indicating migrations out of the Andean region and into the estuary area. Both were therefore natal homers from the upper Amazon. The third individual from the upper Amazon presented similar Sr:Ca and Se:Ca patterns to those of the upper Madeira residents, suggesting it was a natural resident from the upper Amazon. By combining the results of 87Sr:86Sr analyses (LA‐MC‐ICPMS) and Sr:Ca and Se:Ca mappings (SXFM) that are completely independent of one another, we demonstrated that B. rousseauxii also performs natal homing in the upper Amazon. Our results indicate that the life cycle of B. rousseauxii is more complex than previous literature hypothesised, with the existence of partial migration, even in absence of physical barriers. Quantifying the relative importance of these different life‐history strategies will have important implications for fisheries management. Our results also lay the groundwork for conservation efforts in the context of hydropower development in the Amazon Basin and set testable hypotheses of the potential impacts of the Madeira River dams.

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Main Authors: Hauser, Marília, Duponchelle, Fabrice, Hermann, Theodore W., Limburg, Karin E., Castello, Leandro, Stewart, Donald J., García Vásquez, Aurea, García Dávila, Carmen, Pouilly, Marc, Pecheyran, Christophe, Ponzevera, Emmanuel, Renno, Jean-François, Moret, Arthur S., Doria, Carolina R. C.
Format: info:eu-repo/semantics/article biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Wiley 2019-12
Subjects:Brachyplatystoma rousseauxii, Peces de agua dulce, Bagre de agua dulce, Pimelodidae, Especies migratorias, Peces migratorios, Represas, Madeira, río, Otolitos, Amazonía,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12921/415
https://doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13427
https://doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13427
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spelling dig-iiap-pe-20.500.12921-4152022-12-30T00:08:37Z Unmasking continental natal homing in goliath catfish from the upper Amazon Hauser, Marília Duponchelle, Fabrice Hermann, Theodore W. Limburg, Karin E. Castello, Leandro Stewart, Donald J. García Vásquez, Aurea García Dávila, Carmen Pouilly, Marc Pecheyran, Christophe Ponzevera, Emmanuel Renno, Jean-François Moret, Arthur S. Doria, Carolina R. C. Brachyplatystoma rousseauxii Peces de agua dulce Bagre de agua dulce Pimelodidae Especies migratorias Peces migratorios Represas Madeira, río Otolitos Amazonía Amazonian goliath catfishes are widespread in the Amazon Basin. Recently, otolith 87Sr:86Sr analyses using laser ablation–multi‐collector–inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA‐MC‐ICPMS) revealed a >8,000 km trans‐Amazonian natal homing in Brachyplatystoma rousseauxii among fish caught and hatched in the largest Amazon River tributary, the upper Madeira basin. Although also suspected for fish in the upper Amazon, homing could not be demonstrated owing to less distinct environmental 87Sr:86Sr gradients along the Amazon mainstem. Using scanning X‐ray fluorescence microscopy (SXFM), a separate study provided evidence that Se:Ca and Sr:Ca are useful markers for identifying migration into Andean headwaters and the estuarine environment. We analysed otoliths of known 87Sr:86Sr profiles using SXFM mapping to test if Sr:Ca and Se:Ca patterns could demonstrate natal homing for three fish caught in the upper Amazon, using as reference two individuals that were natal homers and two forced residents (hatched after the construction of hydroelectric dams on the Madeira River) from the upper Madeira River. As hypothesised, although the Sr isotope profiles of the upper Amazon individuals were uninformative, two of them presented similar alternating mirror patterns of Sr:Ca and Se:Ca to those of the upper Madeira natal homers, indicating migrations out of the Andean region and into the estuary area. Both were therefore natal homers from the upper Amazon. The third individual from the upper Amazon presented similar Sr:Ca and Se:Ca patterns to those of the upper Madeira residents, suggesting it was a natural resident from the upper Amazon. By combining the results of 87Sr:86Sr analyses (LA‐MC‐ICPMS) and Sr:Ca and Se:Ca mappings (SXFM) that are completely independent of one another, we demonstrated that B. rousseauxii also performs natal homing in the upper Amazon. Our results indicate that the life cycle of B. rousseauxii is more complex than previous literature hypothesised, with the existence of partial migration, even in absence of physical barriers. Quantifying the relative importance of these different life‐history strategies will have important implications for fisheries management. Our results also lay the groundwork for conservation efforts in the context of hydropower development in the Amazon Basin and set testable hypotheses of the potential impacts of the Madeira River dams. Revisado por pares 2019-12-10T18:02:21Z 2019-12-10T18:02:21Z 2019-12 info:eu-repo/semantics/article Freshwater Biology, 65(0): 1–12 1365-2427 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12921/415 https://doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13427 Freshwater Biology https://doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13427 eng info:eu-repo/semantics/article https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/fwb.13427 info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Copyright © 1999-2019 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved application/pdf application/pdf text/plain; charset=utf-8 Wiley Instituto de Investigaciones de la Amazonía Peruana Repositorio Institucional - IIAP
institution IIAP PE
collection DSpace
country Perú
countrycode PE
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-iiap-pe
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del IIAP Perú
language eng
topic Brachyplatystoma rousseauxii
Peces de agua dulce
Bagre de agua dulce
Pimelodidae
Especies migratorias
Peces migratorios
Represas
Madeira, río
Otolitos
Amazonía
Brachyplatystoma rousseauxii
Peces de agua dulce
Bagre de agua dulce
Pimelodidae
Especies migratorias
Peces migratorios
Represas
Madeira, río
Otolitos
Amazonía
spellingShingle Brachyplatystoma rousseauxii
Peces de agua dulce
Bagre de agua dulce
Pimelodidae
Especies migratorias
Peces migratorios
Represas
Madeira, río
Otolitos
Amazonía
Brachyplatystoma rousseauxii
Peces de agua dulce
Bagre de agua dulce
Pimelodidae
Especies migratorias
Peces migratorios
Represas
Madeira, río
Otolitos
Amazonía
Hauser, Marília
Duponchelle, Fabrice
Hermann, Theodore W.
Limburg, Karin E.
Castello, Leandro
Stewart, Donald J.
García Vásquez, Aurea
García Dávila, Carmen
Pouilly, Marc
Pecheyran, Christophe
Ponzevera, Emmanuel
Renno, Jean-François
Moret, Arthur S.
Doria, Carolina R. C.
Unmasking continental natal homing in goliath catfish from the upper Amazon
description Amazonian goliath catfishes are widespread in the Amazon Basin. Recently, otolith 87Sr:86Sr analyses using laser ablation–multi‐collector–inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA‐MC‐ICPMS) revealed a >8,000 km trans‐Amazonian natal homing in Brachyplatystoma rousseauxii among fish caught and hatched in the largest Amazon River tributary, the upper Madeira basin. Although also suspected for fish in the upper Amazon, homing could not be demonstrated owing to less distinct environmental 87Sr:86Sr gradients along the Amazon mainstem. Using scanning X‐ray fluorescence microscopy (SXFM), a separate study provided evidence that Se:Ca and Sr:Ca are useful markers for identifying migration into Andean headwaters and the estuarine environment. We analysed otoliths of known 87Sr:86Sr profiles using SXFM mapping to test if Sr:Ca and Se:Ca patterns could demonstrate natal homing for three fish caught in the upper Amazon, using as reference two individuals that were natal homers and two forced residents (hatched after the construction of hydroelectric dams on the Madeira River) from the upper Madeira River. As hypothesised, although the Sr isotope profiles of the upper Amazon individuals were uninformative, two of them presented similar alternating mirror patterns of Sr:Ca and Se:Ca to those of the upper Madeira natal homers, indicating migrations out of the Andean region and into the estuary area. Both were therefore natal homers from the upper Amazon. The third individual from the upper Amazon presented similar Sr:Ca and Se:Ca patterns to those of the upper Madeira residents, suggesting it was a natural resident from the upper Amazon. By combining the results of 87Sr:86Sr analyses (LA‐MC‐ICPMS) and Sr:Ca and Se:Ca mappings (SXFM) that are completely independent of one another, we demonstrated that B. rousseauxii also performs natal homing in the upper Amazon. Our results indicate that the life cycle of B. rousseauxii is more complex than previous literature hypothesised, with the existence of partial migration, even in absence of physical barriers. Quantifying the relative importance of these different life‐history strategies will have important implications for fisheries management. Our results also lay the groundwork for conservation efforts in the context of hydropower development in the Amazon Basin and set testable hypotheses of the potential impacts of the Madeira River dams.
format info:eu-repo/semantics/article
topic_facet Brachyplatystoma rousseauxii
Peces de agua dulce
Bagre de agua dulce
Pimelodidae
Especies migratorias
Peces migratorios
Represas
Madeira, río
Otolitos
Amazonía
author Hauser, Marília
Duponchelle, Fabrice
Hermann, Theodore W.
Limburg, Karin E.
Castello, Leandro
Stewart, Donald J.
García Vásquez, Aurea
García Dávila, Carmen
Pouilly, Marc
Pecheyran, Christophe
Ponzevera, Emmanuel
Renno, Jean-François
Moret, Arthur S.
Doria, Carolina R. C.
author_facet Hauser, Marília
Duponchelle, Fabrice
Hermann, Theodore W.
Limburg, Karin E.
Castello, Leandro
Stewart, Donald J.
García Vásquez, Aurea
García Dávila, Carmen
Pouilly, Marc
Pecheyran, Christophe
Ponzevera, Emmanuel
Renno, Jean-François
Moret, Arthur S.
Doria, Carolina R. C.
author_sort Hauser, Marília
title Unmasking continental natal homing in goliath catfish from the upper Amazon
title_short Unmasking continental natal homing in goliath catfish from the upper Amazon
title_full Unmasking continental natal homing in goliath catfish from the upper Amazon
title_fullStr Unmasking continental natal homing in goliath catfish from the upper Amazon
title_full_unstemmed Unmasking continental natal homing in goliath catfish from the upper Amazon
title_sort unmasking continental natal homing in goliath catfish from the upper amazon
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2019-12
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12921/415
https://doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13427
https://doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13427
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