Jump to navigation
Food and Agriculture Organization

User menu

  • Contact us
  • Login

Search form

  • English
  • Français
Indian Ocean Tuna Commission
Indian Ocean Tuna Commission
  • Home
  • The Commission
    • Overview
    • Structure of the Commission
    • Scientific Committee
    • Compliance Committee
    • Standing Committee on Administration and Finance
    • Competence: Area & Species
    • History & Basic texts
    • Conservation and management measures
    • Cooperation with other organisations
    • Capacity building
    • Performance Review
    • The Secretariat
    • Secretariat Staff
    • Allocation Estimations
    • Observers to IOTC meetings
  • Science
    • Overview
    • Scientific Committee
    • Status of the stocks
    • Working Parties: Science
    • Regional Observer Scheme: Science
    • Science: Capacity Building
    • IOTC Science Glossary
    • Invited Experts and Consultants
  • Compliance
    • Overview
    • Capacity building: Compliance
    • Compliance Committee
    • Information for MCS purposes
    • Monitoring of compliance
    • Port State Measures
    • Regional Observer Programme on Transhipments
    • Reporting Templates
    • Statistical document programme
    • StatDoc Validation
    • Vessel records/ IUU Vessels List
  • Data
    • Overview
    • Reporting data to the IOTC
    • Available datasets
    • Reference data catalogue
    • Fisheries identification wizard
    • Interactive data browser
    • Status of reporting of fisheries statistics
    • Capacity building: Data
    • Tagging Data
  • Projects
  • Meetings
  • Documents
  • News
  • Educational Tools

Quick links

  • Home
  • Allocation estimations
  • Capacity building
  • Conservation and management measures
    • Search
  • E-PSM application
    • Request to enter port (AREP)
  • Guide for IOTC data and information reporting
  • IOTC Circulars
  • IOTC Science Glossary
  • IUU Vessel list
  • Interactive data browser
  • Performance Review
  • Statdoc Validation
  • Stock Status Dashboard
  • Vessel records
  • e-MARIS
  • e-RAV

Otolith δ18O as a tracer of yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares) nursery origin in the Indian Ocean

Reference: 
IOTC-2020-WPTT22(AS)-06_Rev1
File: 
PDF icon IOTC-2020-WPTT22AS-06_Rev1.pdf
Type: 
Meeting documents
Year: 
2020
Meeting: 
Working Party on Tropical Tunas (WPTT)
Meeting session: 
2 202
Availability: 
8 October 2020
Authors: 
Artetxe-Arrate I
Fraile I
Farley J
Clear N
Darnaude AM
Dettman D
Krug I
Nikolic N
Médieu A
Ahusan M
Lansdell M
Proctor C
Priatna A
Lestari P
Taufik M
Parker D
Usmani H
Zehra K
Khan M
Shahid U
Kazmi S M R
Islam S
Tariq M
Zafar S
Zaidi J
Davies C
Marsac F
Murua H
Abstract: 

Oxygen stable isotope in otoliths (δ18O) was used to investigate stock structure of yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares) across the Indian Ocean. Differences in otolith δ18O signatures among young of the year (YOY) yellowfin tuna were examined to determine whether there was sufficient distinction among three main nursery areas of the equatorial Indian Ocean (West, Central and East), to establish a reference isotopic signature (a baseline). The nursery origin of juvenile yellowfin (47-75 cm fork length (FL)) tuna from Reunion and Pakistan was then compared with these nursery signals. Juvenile fish from Reunion show δ18O signatures comparable with those of the nearest nursery area (West nursery), but juvenile fish from the Pakistan show distinctive δ18O composition compared to any of the nursery areas described. Therefore, samples from Pakistan were considered as an additional baseline signature for adult assignment purposes. Quadratic discriminant function analysis was used to assign adult individuals to one of the four areas in our baseline. Results indicate that western nursery was contributing the most to the fish analysed (24 adult out of 39 were predicted to this nursery) with a minor contribution from Pakistan (5 individuals). No Central or East nursery origins were detected among the adult sample. A fraction of yellowfin tuna (11 individuals) was left unclassified. This is an important first step towards understanding the mixing rates and the connectivity of yellowfin tuna in the Indian Ocean.

Footer menu

  • Home
  • The Commission
  • Science
  • Compliance
  • Data
  • Projects
  • Meetings
  • Documents
  • News
  • Educational Tools