Abstract
Trace element analysis or “elemental fingerprinting” is widely used in stock structure analyses. Postmortem contamination of bony structures can confound the results of microconstituent studies or introduce an additional source of noise to the data, thus reducing the ability of the technique to detect real variation in trace element concentrations. Despite the potential for postmortem contamination during sample preparation, the effectiveness of the procedures used to remove potential contaminants from sectioned otoliths and other calcareous structures prior to laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA ICP-MS) has not previously been addressed. Otoliths and dorsal spine sections of albacore tuna (Thunnus alalunga) collected from the North East Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea were deliberately contaminated prior to analysis of trace element composition using LA ICP-MS. The effectiveness of three cleaning treatments (rinsing in ultrapure water, 30% hydrogen peroxide and ultrapure 5% nitric acid) at removing this postmortem contamination were compared. Magnesium and strontium were relatively robust to postmortem effects when exposed to contamination at concentrations of 50ppm and 200ppm respectively. Soaking in a solution containing Mn, Cs and Ba (50ppm) caused a marked increase in the detected concentration of each element in both structures. Translucent bands in both structures were more susceptible to contamination. Rinsing in ultrapure water or hydrogen peroxide was not effective at removing Mn, Cs and Ba contamination from either calcareous structure. Washing the otoliths and spines in nitric acid successfully removed postmortem contaminants.The removal of otoliths from tuna damages the appearance of the fish and has an adverse effect on market value. However spines are easily removed, do not affect the appearance or value of the fish and are the most commonly used structure for age determination. A weak but significant correlation was observed between Ba in opaque zones in otoliths and dorsal spines. All other spine to otolith correlations were not significant. The results do not provide support for the use of spines as an alternative to otoliths in trace elemental analyses.
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More From: Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
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