Abstract

Coregonus peled (Gmelin) embryos at the eyed stage were immersed in tetracycline hydrochloride (TC) solution (600 mg l−1) and fluorescent marks on the otoliths from fish were identified under a UV light microscope. Three weeks after treatment, when the larval fish had hatched, multiple primordia of the sagitta had fluorescent bands whose locations suggest that calcification begins before formation of the otolith's core. Upon hatching, increments were few or absent, and daily increments started forming after hatching. In coregonid larvae immersed in TC solution immediately after hatching, the fluorescent band was only 1 day's growth increment wide in the otolith. The age of larvae based on ring counts after marking corresponded to the actual age, but further studies are required. Triple marks due to 35‐h immersions in TC solution separated by 5–7 day feeding periods were clearly readable in the otoliths. One month after treatment the fluorescent marks were identified under UV light on otoliths from every fish. In treated embryos, 38% of fish had marks 3 months after TC immersion, whereas in treated larvae 60–80% of fish grown up to 38.7 mm were marked.

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