Investigating the Post Mortem Applications of Hard Parts from Two Common New Zealand Squid Species: Onykia ingens and Nototodarus sloanii

Hard parts of squid are used in a variety of post mortem analyses, such as diet studies, which shed light on various aspects of the squid’s life. In this thesis, hard parts were reviewed. Beaks and statoliths were found to contain the most information about the squid’s life history and are the most...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Northern, Tyler Jon
Other Authors: Smith, Abigail, McKinnon, Jean, Bolstad, Kathrin
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Otago 2017
Subjects:
SEM
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10523/7175
id ftunivotagoour:oai:ourarchive.otago.ac.nz:10523/7175
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivotagoour:oai:ourarchive.otago.ac.nz:10523/7175 2023-05-15T17:52:54+02:00 Investigating the Post Mortem Applications of Hard Parts from Two Common New Zealand Squid Species: Onykia ingens and Nototodarus sloanii Northern, Tyler Jon Smith, Abigail McKinnon, Jean Bolstad, Kathrin 2017-03-16T02:25:48Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10523/7175 en eng University of Otago http://hdl.handle.net/10523/7175 All items in OUR Archive are provided for private study and research purposes and are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated. LA-ICP-MS SEM Raman Microscopy Trace element analyses Onykia ingens Nototodarus sloanii Allometry Cephalopod Thesis or Dissertation 2017 ftunivotagoour 2022-05-11T19:19:25Z Hard parts of squid are used in a variety of post mortem analyses, such as diet studies, which shed light on various aspects of the squid’s life. In this thesis, hard parts were reviewed. Beaks and statoliths were found to contain the most information about the squid’s life history and are the most widely used squid hard parts. Allometric equations were created to explore the correlation between beak and body growth in Onykia ingens and Nototodarus sloanii. The resulting regressions were analysed to find the best predictors of body size for use in diet analyses. Beak weights were analysed for the first time and were found to be good predictors of squid size in O. ingens; however, rostral lengths were shown to be the best squid size predictors in N. sloanii. The structure and composition of statoliths from both O. ingens and N. sloanii were analysed using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), Raman spectroscopy and laser-ablation-inductively-coupled-plasma- mass-spectrometery (LA-ICP-MS). Statoliths of both species were shown to consist of calcium carbonate crystals in the aragonitic polymorph. Statoliths of both species contained all 10 of the trace elements that were analysed using LA-ICP-MS (Be, Mn, Mg, Cu, Zn, Sr, Y, Zr, Ba, U) and this was the first time that Be was recorded in squid statoliths. Trace elements were compared between zones within statoliths (inner and outer zones), between locations within O. ingens and between species. There were significant differences in some trace elements between zones, locations and species. As trace element incorporation is different depending on location of capture and species, trace elements in statoliths of these two species have the potential to be used as geographic markers. The trace element composition of beaks of O. ingens was analysed using both LA-ICP-MS and solution-based-ICP-MS and 26 trace elements were recorded. This is the first time that trace elements have been reported in squid beaks. Trace element incorporation mechanisms for these squid beaks is unknown; however, recording the presence of trace elements is the first step in gathering this information. Further directions for this research, including its possible use in fisheries forensics, are discussed. Thesis Onykia ingens University of Otago: Research Archive (OUR Archive) New Zealand
institution Open Polar
collection University of Otago: Research Archive (OUR Archive)
op_collection_id ftunivotagoour
language English
topic LA-ICP-MS
SEM
Raman Microscopy
Trace element analyses
Onykia ingens
Nototodarus sloanii
Allometry
Cephalopod
spellingShingle LA-ICP-MS
SEM
Raman Microscopy
Trace element analyses
Onykia ingens
Nototodarus sloanii
Allometry
Cephalopod
Northern, Tyler Jon
Investigating the Post Mortem Applications of Hard Parts from Two Common New Zealand Squid Species: Onykia ingens and Nototodarus sloanii
topic_facet LA-ICP-MS
SEM
Raman Microscopy
Trace element analyses
Onykia ingens
Nototodarus sloanii
Allometry
Cephalopod
description Hard parts of squid are used in a variety of post mortem analyses, such as diet studies, which shed light on various aspects of the squid’s life. In this thesis, hard parts were reviewed. Beaks and statoliths were found to contain the most information about the squid’s life history and are the most widely used squid hard parts. Allometric equations were created to explore the correlation between beak and body growth in Onykia ingens and Nototodarus sloanii. The resulting regressions were analysed to find the best predictors of body size for use in diet analyses. Beak weights were analysed for the first time and were found to be good predictors of squid size in O. ingens; however, rostral lengths were shown to be the best squid size predictors in N. sloanii. The structure and composition of statoliths from both O. ingens and N. sloanii were analysed using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), Raman spectroscopy and laser-ablation-inductively-coupled-plasma- mass-spectrometery (LA-ICP-MS). Statoliths of both species were shown to consist of calcium carbonate crystals in the aragonitic polymorph. Statoliths of both species contained all 10 of the trace elements that were analysed using LA-ICP-MS (Be, Mn, Mg, Cu, Zn, Sr, Y, Zr, Ba, U) and this was the first time that Be was recorded in squid statoliths. Trace elements were compared between zones within statoliths (inner and outer zones), between locations within O. ingens and between species. There were significant differences in some trace elements between zones, locations and species. As trace element incorporation is different depending on location of capture and species, trace elements in statoliths of these two species have the potential to be used as geographic markers. The trace element composition of beaks of O. ingens was analysed using both LA-ICP-MS and solution-based-ICP-MS and 26 trace elements were recorded. This is the first time that trace elements have been reported in squid beaks. Trace element incorporation mechanisms for these squid beaks is unknown; however, recording the presence of trace elements is the first step in gathering this information. Further directions for this research, including its possible use in fisheries forensics, are discussed.
author2 Smith, Abigail
McKinnon, Jean
Bolstad, Kathrin
format Thesis
author Northern, Tyler Jon
author_facet Northern, Tyler Jon
author_sort Northern, Tyler Jon
title Investigating the Post Mortem Applications of Hard Parts from Two Common New Zealand Squid Species: Onykia ingens and Nototodarus sloanii
title_short Investigating the Post Mortem Applications of Hard Parts from Two Common New Zealand Squid Species: Onykia ingens and Nototodarus sloanii
title_full Investigating the Post Mortem Applications of Hard Parts from Two Common New Zealand Squid Species: Onykia ingens and Nototodarus sloanii
title_fullStr Investigating the Post Mortem Applications of Hard Parts from Two Common New Zealand Squid Species: Onykia ingens and Nototodarus sloanii
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the Post Mortem Applications of Hard Parts from Two Common New Zealand Squid Species: Onykia ingens and Nototodarus sloanii
title_sort investigating the post mortem applications of hard parts from two common new zealand squid species: onykia ingens and nototodarus sloanii
publisher University of Otago
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10523/7175
geographic New Zealand
geographic_facet New Zealand
genre Onykia ingens
genre_facet Onykia ingens
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10523/7175
op_rights All items in OUR Archive are provided for private study and research purposes and are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated.
_version_ 1766160660669923328