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Age and growth of endangered smalltooth sawfish (Pristis pectinata) verified with LA-ICP-MS analysis of vertebrae
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Age and growth of endangered smalltooth sawfish (Pristis pectinata) verified with LA-ICP-MS analysis of vertebrae

Rachel M Scharer, William F Patterson, 3rd, John K Carlson and Gregg R Poulakis
PloS one, Vol.7(10), pp.e47850-e47850
2012
PMCID: PMC3474717
PMID: 23082225

Abstract

Aging - physiology Animals Calcium - metabolism Endangered Species Estuaries Female Florida Geography Lasers Male Mass Spectrometry - methods Phosphorus - metabolism Skates (Fish) - growth & development Spectrophotometry, Atomic - methods Spine - anatomy & histology Spine - growth & development Strontium - metabolism
Endangered smalltooth sawfish (Pristis pectinata) were opportunistically sampled in south Florida and aged by counting opaque bands in sectioned vertebrae (n=15). Small sample size precluded traditional age verification, but fish collected in spring and summer had translucent vertebrae margins, while fish collected in winter had opaque margins. Trends in Sr:Ca measured across vertebrae with laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry corresponded well to annual salinity trends observed in sawfish estuarine nursery habitats in south Florida, thus serve as a chemical marker verifying annual formation of opaque bands. Based on that finding and assumptions about mean birth date and timing of opaque band formation, estimated age ranged from 0.4 y for a 0.60 m total length (TL) male to 14.0 y for a 4.35 m TL female. Von Bertalanffy growth parameters computed from size at age data were 4.48 m for L(∞), 0.219 y(-1)for k, and -0.81 y for t(0). Results of this study have important implications for sawfish conservation as well as for inferring habitat residency of euryhaline elasmobranchs via chemical analysis of vertebrae.
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https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0047850View
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