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Resumen del producto
Trasviña-Carrillo, L.D., A., Hernández-Herrera, Y.E., Torres-Rojas, F., Galván-Magaña, A., Sánchez-González & S., Aguiñiga-García
(2018).
Spatial and trophic preferencies of jumbo squid Dosidicus gigas (D´Orbigny, 1835) in the central Gulf of California: ecological inferences using stable isotopes.
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry.
32(15): 1225-1236.
DOI: 10.1002/rcm.8147.
Spatial and trophic preferencies of jumbo squid Dosidicus gigas (D´Orbigny, 1835) in the central Gulf of California: ecological inferences using stable isotopes
Lizeth Daniela Trasviña-Carrillo, Agustín Hernández-Herrera, Yassir Edén Torres-Rojas, Felipe Galván-Magaña, Alberto Sánchez-González y Sergio Aguiñiga-García
Rationale: The jumbo squid Dosidicus gigas is a fishery resource of considerable economic and ecological importance in the Mexican Pacific. Studies on its habitat preferences are needed to understand recent fluctuations in the abundance and availability of the species. Stable isotope analysis allows us to infer ecological aspects such as spatial distribution and trophic preferences. Methods: We used an isotope ratio mass spectrometer, automated for carbonate analysis, and coupled to an elemental analyzer, to determine the isotopic composition of statoliths (d18O and d13C values) and beaks (d13C and d15N values) from 219 individuals caught over two fishing seasons (2007 and 2009) off the coast of Santa Rosalía, in the central Gulf of California. We used these isotopic ratios to assess variation in spatial and trophic preferences by sex, size, and fishing season. Results: In the 2009 group, we observed significant differences in statolith d13C values and beak d13C and d15N values between males and females. Between size groups, we observed significant differences in statolith d18O and d13C values in 2007 and in beak d13C and d15N values during both seasons. Both seasons were characterized by high overlap in d18O and d13C values between sexes and in 2009 between size groups. We observed low trophic overlap between sexes in 2009 and between size groups during both seasons. Conclusions: The isotopic ratios from statoliths and beaks indicate that D. gigas has changed its spatial and trophic preferences, a shift that is probably related to changes in the species' diet. This intraspecific variation in preferences could be related to characteristics such as size, which may influence squid distribution preferences.
Palabras clave: Jumbo squid; Oxigen; Carbon; Santa Rosalía; Baja Califonia Sur
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