INVESTIGADORES
AVIGLIANO Esteban
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Environmental Life History of Neotropical Fish through the Chemistry of Calcified Structures
Autor/es:
AVIGLIANO, ESTEBAN
Lugar:
Porto
Reunión:
Congreso; IX Iberian Congress of Ichthyology (SIBIC 2022); 2022
Institución organizadora:
IBERIAN SOCIETY OF ICHTHYOLOGY
Resumen:
The neotropical inland waters hold about 30% of the world’s fish species. South America,in particular, brings together two of the largest basins in the world: the Amazon and Plata Basin.These are long migratory corridors of thousands of kilometers for numerous species of commercialimportance. Poor management practices have brought many fisheries to the brink of collapse,including species for which little is known about their biology or environmental history. In thelast decade, the microchemistry of calcified structures has been a valuable tool to reveal differentaspects of the biology of fishes. Calcified structures such as otoliths keep an environmental recordas fish grow, thus providing information on nursery areas, population structure, and migrations.This tool is especially powerful when the environmental variability (e.g., water) is known. Theuse of bioindicators such as bivalves, which keep track of environmental variation over time, isparticularly promising for improving otolith-chemistry-based interpretations. The usefulness ofdifferent analytical techniques of hard structures (chemical analysis in one and two dimensions) inrelation to different geographical scales of evaluation is discussed. Advances in the environmentalmapping of radiogenic isotopes (87Sr/86Sr) and trace elements in five countries traversed by the Plata Basin (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Bolivia) and their extension to the southern Atlantic and Pacific basins (Patagonia, Argentina, and Chile) are presented. The results of these techniques have made it possible to reveal the natal origin and reveal the environmental life history of various neotropical fish species, including cross-border migrations and complex population structures