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Intraspecific discrimination of fish populations by fluorescence spectroscopy
Author(s) -
Dinorah Machado Vaz de Lima,
C. A. Santana,
L.H.C. Andrade,
Yzél Rondon Súarez,
S. M. Lima
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
acta scientiarum. technology/acta scientiarum. technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.183
H-Index - 17
eISSN - 1807-8664
pISSN - 1806-2563
DOI - 10.4025/actascitechnol.v43i1.48395
Subject(s) - intraspecific competition , fluorescence , fluorescence spectroscopy , fish <actinopterygii> , habitat , multivariate statistics , ecology , biology , environmental science , biological system , analytical chemistry (journal) , chemistry , environmental chemistry , physics , fishery , optics , statistics , mathematics
This study used the visible fluorescence signal of scales from Astyanax lacustris fishes to differentiate ten populations of streams in Ivinhema River Basin, Upper Paraná Basin, Brazil. Scales were removed from the humeral region of each fish and the fluorescence spectroscopy was carried out with two excitation wavelengths: at 360 nm (UV-A) and 405 nm. The broad emission covers all visible regions and it is related to the organic fraction of scale, basically composed from type I collagen. By interpreting the experimental fluorescence spectra with multivariate statistical analysis, it was possible to discriminate the investigated populations. By exciting the inner face of scales at 405 nm, for instance, the obtained Wilk’s lambda was 0.143, and the ten sampled streams could be statistically differentiated with 85.2% of explanation. This fluorescence interpretation exhibits very good correlation with the diet composition, which was also investigated for the same fishes from which the scales were removed. The applied methodology was capable to analyze the scales of A. lacustris, and to provide meaningful and enlightening results for the differentiation of populations. This methodology is very important for aquatic environmental study, mainly because small fishes, non-migratory or with small migration rate, can exhibit differences among habitats, as response to genetic isolation and adjustment to local conditions.

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