NITROGEN ISOTOPES OF OTOLITH-BOUND ORGANIC MATTER: A NEW TOOL FOR TROPHIC RECONSTRUCTION USING MODERN AND FOSSIL OTOLITHS

Global declines in fish biodiversity and abundance, from overfishing, habitat loss, and pollution, are expected to worsen with climate change. Our ability to predict fish response to climate and fishing impacts is hindered by lack of long term data, resulting from a dearth of tools for quantifying p...

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Main Author: Lueders-Dumont, Jessica Abigail
Other Authors: Ward, Bess B, Sigman, Daniel M, Geosciences Department
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Princeton, NJ : Princeton University 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01fx719q354
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spelling ftprincetonuniv:oai:dataspace.princeton.edu:88435/dsp01fx719q354 2023-05-15T15:27:51+02:00 NITROGEN ISOTOPES OF OTOLITH-BOUND ORGANIC MATTER: A NEW TOOL FOR TROPHIC RECONSTRUCTION USING MODERN AND FOSSIL OTOLITHS Lueders-Dumont, Jessica Abigail Ward, Bess B Sigman, Daniel M Geosciences Department 2019 http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01fx719q354 en eng Princeton, NJ : Princeton University The Mudd Manuscript Library retains one bound copy of each dissertation. Search for these copies in the library's main catalog: catalog.princeton.edu http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01fx719q354 Fish Nitrogen isotopes Otolith Geochemistry Biological oceanography Paleontology Academic dissertations (Ph.D.) 2019 ftprincetonuniv 2022-04-10T21:02:18Z Global declines in fish biodiversity and abundance, from overfishing, habitat loss, and pollution, are expected to worsen with climate change. Our ability to predict fish response to climate and fishing impacts is hindered by lack of long term data, resulting from a dearth of tools for quantifying past ecological variation. The nitrogen isotopic composition (δ15N) of otolith-bound organic matter (OM) is a potential source of information on the dietary history of bony fishes. In contrast to white muscle tissue δ15N (δ15Nwmt), which is commonly used for ecological studies, the δ15N of otolith-bound OM (δ15Noto) provides a record of whole life history. δ15Noto can be measured in contexts where tissue is not available, for example, in otolith archives and sedimentary deposits. Application of δ15Noto was previously limited by the low N content of otoliths, which precluded routine measurement of individual otoliths. This dissertation reports measurements made by persulfate-oxidation of otolith-bound OM to nitrate followed by bacterial conversion to N2O, which increases sensitivity by 200 fold relative to previous techniques. Optimization of the new method is described in Chapter two, which also reports the first analysis of δ15Noto in fossil otoliths and shows higher trophic level of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) prior to the onset of industrial fishing. The long term analytical precision of 0.3‰ makes it a useful tool for many ecological questions. Chapter three shows that δ15Noto is highly correlated with δ15Nwmt across diverse taxa (25 species investigated). Biomineralization introduces a small but predictable isotope effect in otoliths. Chapter four describes a diet switch experiment, which introduces micro-drilling δ15Noto techniques and validates the ability of δ15Noto to record diet and diet changes. Four appendices are included. The first reports δ15N measurements of nitrate, phytoplankton, zooplankton, and fish otoliths from two oceanographic cruises on the US Northeast Continental Shelf. The second and third report decadal and centennial δ15Noto records of commercially important fish species in the Gulf of Maine, Georges Bank, and Iceland. The fourth reports a global compilation of published metazoan δ15N data, with a first meta-analysis suggesting that anthropogenic impacts can affect the relationship between fish size and δ15Nwmt. Other/Unknown Material atlantic cod Gadus morhua Iceland DataSpace at Princeton University
institution Open Polar
collection DataSpace at Princeton University
op_collection_id ftprincetonuniv
language English
topic Fish
Nitrogen isotopes
Otolith
Geochemistry
Biological oceanography
Paleontology
spellingShingle Fish
Nitrogen isotopes
Otolith
Geochemistry
Biological oceanography
Paleontology
Lueders-Dumont, Jessica Abigail
NITROGEN ISOTOPES OF OTOLITH-BOUND ORGANIC MATTER: A NEW TOOL FOR TROPHIC RECONSTRUCTION USING MODERN AND FOSSIL OTOLITHS
topic_facet Fish
Nitrogen isotopes
Otolith
Geochemistry
Biological oceanography
Paleontology
description Global declines in fish biodiversity and abundance, from overfishing, habitat loss, and pollution, are expected to worsen with climate change. Our ability to predict fish response to climate and fishing impacts is hindered by lack of long term data, resulting from a dearth of tools for quantifying past ecological variation. The nitrogen isotopic composition (δ15N) of otolith-bound organic matter (OM) is a potential source of information on the dietary history of bony fishes. In contrast to white muscle tissue δ15N (δ15Nwmt), which is commonly used for ecological studies, the δ15N of otolith-bound OM (δ15Noto) provides a record of whole life history. δ15Noto can be measured in contexts where tissue is not available, for example, in otolith archives and sedimentary deposits. Application of δ15Noto was previously limited by the low N content of otoliths, which precluded routine measurement of individual otoliths. This dissertation reports measurements made by persulfate-oxidation of otolith-bound OM to nitrate followed by bacterial conversion to N2O, which increases sensitivity by 200 fold relative to previous techniques. Optimization of the new method is described in Chapter two, which also reports the first analysis of δ15Noto in fossil otoliths and shows higher trophic level of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) prior to the onset of industrial fishing. The long term analytical precision of 0.3‰ makes it a useful tool for many ecological questions. Chapter three shows that δ15Noto is highly correlated with δ15Nwmt across diverse taxa (25 species investigated). Biomineralization introduces a small but predictable isotope effect in otoliths. Chapter four describes a diet switch experiment, which introduces micro-drilling δ15Noto techniques and validates the ability of δ15Noto to record diet and diet changes. Four appendices are included. The first reports δ15N measurements of nitrate, phytoplankton, zooplankton, and fish otoliths from two oceanographic cruises on the US Northeast Continental Shelf. The second and third report decadal and centennial δ15Noto records of commercially important fish species in the Gulf of Maine, Georges Bank, and Iceland. The fourth reports a global compilation of published metazoan δ15N data, with a first meta-analysis suggesting that anthropogenic impacts can affect the relationship between fish size and δ15Nwmt.
author2 Ward, Bess B
Sigman, Daniel M
Geosciences Department
format Other/Unknown Material
author Lueders-Dumont, Jessica Abigail
author_facet Lueders-Dumont, Jessica Abigail
author_sort Lueders-Dumont, Jessica Abigail
title NITROGEN ISOTOPES OF OTOLITH-BOUND ORGANIC MATTER: A NEW TOOL FOR TROPHIC RECONSTRUCTION USING MODERN AND FOSSIL OTOLITHS
title_short NITROGEN ISOTOPES OF OTOLITH-BOUND ORGANIC MATTER: A NEW TOOL FOR TROPHIC RECONSTRUCTION USING MODERN AND FOSSIL OTOLITHS
title_full NITROGEN ISOTOPES OF OTOLITH-BOUND ORGANIC MATTER: A NEW TOOL FOR TROPHIC RECONSTRUCTION USING MODERN AND FOSSIL OTOLITHS
title_fullStr NITROGEN ISOTOPES OF OTOLITH-BOUND ORGANIC MATTER: A NEW TOOL FOR TROPHIC RECONSTRUCTION USING MODERN AND FOSSIL OTOLITHS
title_full_unstemmed NITROGEN ISOTOPES OF OTOLITH-BOUND ORGANIC MATTER: A NEW TOOL FOR TROPHIC RECONSTRUCTION USING MODERN AND FOSSIL OTOLITHS
title_sort nitrogen isotopes of otolith-bound organic matter: a new tool for trophic reconstruction using modern and fossil otoliths
publisher Princeton, NJ : Princeton University
publishDate 2019
url http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01fx719q354
genre atlantic cod
Gadus morhua
Iceland
genre_facet atlantic cod
Gadus morhua
Iceland
op_relation The Mudd Manuscript Library retains one bound copy of each dissertation. Search for these copies in the library's main catalog: catalog.princeton.edu
http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp01fx719q354
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