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- Title
Natal environments of age‐0 paddlefish in the middle Mississippi River inferred from dentary microchemistry.
- Authors
Rude, Neil P.; Whitledge, Gregory W.
- Abstract
Effective management and conservation of riverine fish species relies on identification of habitats that contribute recruits to fish populations. Paddlefish are an important commercial and recreational species inhabiting North American large rivers. However, despite the knowledge of adult paddlefish movement patterns in large rivers, their principal natal environments and early life dispersal patterns remain unknown. Paddlefish dentary microchemistry can be used to identify natal environment of fish in large river networks such as the middle Mississippi River (MMR) and tributaries. The goals of this study were to (a) use dentary microchemistry (strontium:calcium ratios; Sr:Ca) to determine natal environment and potential drift for age‐0 paddlefish collected from the MMR and (b) assess whether MMR reach or year of collection influenced the percentage of recruits originating from different rivers. Age‐0 paddlefish were collected during 2010–2011 from two reaches of the MMR (upstream and downstream of the Kaskaskia River confluence). Water samples from the MMR and tributaries (upper Mississippi, Missouri, Illinois, Osage, and Kaskaskia Rivers) were collected during 2006–2016. Water Sr:Ca differed among rivers, enabling identification of natal environment for individual fish using dentary core Sr:Ca. The MMR (44–69% of fish sampled) and Missouri River (25–45% of fish sampled) were the primary natal environments for age‐0 paddlefish across both river reaches and collection years. The upper Mississippi River and smaller tributaries contributed few recruits (<13% of fish sampled). Conservation of paddlefish populations should include maintenance or improvement of connectivity between river reaches used for spawning and juvenile rearing and stock assessments of riverine paddlefish may need to be conducted at a riverscape scale because multiple rivers can contribute to paddlefish recruitment in a particular river reach.
- Subjects
RIVERS State (Nigeria); ILLINOIS; MICROCHEMISTRY; FISH populations; RIVERS; WATER sampling; DISPERSAL (Ecology); ECOLOGY; FISH conservation; RIVER conservation
- Publication
River Research & Applications, 2019, Vol 35, Issue 9, p1554
- ISSN
1535-1459
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/rra.3526