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Bomb Radiocarbon and Age Validation
Despite the global acceptance of otolith annuli as the best means for
estimating the age of most fish species, the correct interpretation of
the annuli is far from trivial, and can result in serious and systematic
ageing error. Indeed, aside from the use of tagged, hatchery-reared
fish released into the wild, confirming the accuracy of a method of
annulus interpretation for marine fish species is often problematic.
Mark-recapture of chemically-tagged individuals has generally been
considered to be the most accurate means of confirming the
frequency of formation of presumed annuli, through comparison of
time at liberty with the number of annuli deposited distal to the
chemical check. While the approach is sound, extremely low
recapture rates for fish at liberty more than 2-3 years can make it
difficult to acquire sufficient samples for an adequate test.
Moreover, the technique validates the time elapsed since tagging,
not the absolute age of the fish. Alternatively, radiochemical dating
based on 210Pb : 226Ra or
228Th : 228Ra
ratios can be used to differentiate
between very different age interpretations, but these assays are too
imprecise for detailed or individual age confirmations. The most
widely used approach, that of the seasonal progression of marginal
increments, is well suited only to fast-growing fish, and suffers from
the lack of an objective means of evaluation. Thus there is a well
defined gap in our ability to confirm the age interpretations of the
majority of marine fish species, particularly those that are long-lived.
However, the recent finding that nuclear testing left a dated
mark in the otolith provides a significant breakthrough in our ability
to determine accurate, absolute ages for individual long-lived fish.
The widespread atmospheric testing of atomic bombs in the 1950's
and 1960's produced a 100% increase in atmospheric radiocarbon,
which was quickly incorporated into the world's oceans. Analysis
of annular growth rings in coral demonstrated that bomb
radiocarbon was incorporated into the accreting coralline structure
in concentrations proportional to those present in the water column.
Thus the time series of bomb radiocarbon recorded in the coral was
shown to reflect that present in the marine environment, which
increased by about 20% between 1950 and 1970. Using accelerator
mass spectrometry (AMS) as a sensitive and accurate assay tool,
Kalish (1993) was able to demonstrate that the otoliths of a New
Zealand fish species also incorporated 14C, and that the time series
of radiocarbon reconstructed from the presumed otolith annuli was
similar to that present in nearby corals. Thus he was able to infer
that the otolith annuli had been interpreted and aged correctly,
because systematic under- or over-ageing would have resulted in a
phase shift between the otolith 14C
and the coral 14C time series.
Subsequent work by both Kalish and our laboratory has confirmed
the value of the bomb radiocarbon technique for solving problems
of age validation in a variety of fish species. Furthermore, recent
work in our laboratory has confirmed that the uptake of 14C
in young
fish otoliths is synchronous with that of both corals and bivalves in
the North Atlantic. Such large-scale synchronicity implies that the
14C time series reconstructed from the otolith cores of old fish can be
compared to one of the other North Atlantic time series; errors in
annulus-based age determinations would manifest themselves as
non-coherent time series.
In light of the sharp rate of increase of the
14C signal associated with the onset of nuclear testing, interpretation of the
14C chronology in
otolith cores is relatively simple; the otolith chronology should
match other published chronologies for the region as long as the
annular age assignments (= year-class) are correct. Any under-ageing would phase shift the otolith 14C chronology towards more
recent years, while over-ageing would phase shift it towards earlier
years. Because marine waters with D14C values
greater than 00/00 did
not generally exist prior to the late 1950's, coastal fish otolith cores
with sub-zero values must have formed before the late 1950's. Even
contamination with material of more recent origin could only
increase the 14C value, not decrease it.
Thus the 14C value sets a
minimum age to the sample, and the years 1958-1965 become the
most sensitive years for 14C-based ageing.
While techniques such as the mark-recapture of chemically-tagged
fish can be used to accurately validate the annual frequency of
formation of growth increments in the otolith, especially in young or
abundant fishes, only radiocarbon from nuclear testing has the
potential to confirm both annulus formation and absolute age in
individual fish. All studies to date suggest that the accuracy of an
alternative ageing technique can be determined to within 1-3 yr.
The only constraints to this procedure are the relatively high cost
(~$700-$1000 per otolith) and the requirement for fish hatched
during the 1958-65 period, so as to take advantage of the unique 14C
values during that period. While the availability of suitable otolith
samples may limit the applicability of this approach to specific
stocks and species, use of bomb-derived radiocarbon as a dated
otolith marker appears to provide one of the most accurate and
logistically feasible methods for the age validation of long-lived
species that is currently available.
For further information and the results of recent studies, see
Campana (1997), Campana and Jones
(1998), Campana et al. 2008
, Neilson and Campana
(2008), Bruch et al. (2009)
and Davis-Foust et al.
(2009). A review of the field is presented
in Campana (1999). The Methods
page provides details of otolith preparation protocols.
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