Larger body size leads to greater female beluga whale reproductive activity at the southern periphery of their range

Identification of phenotypic characteristics in reproductively successful individuals provides important insights into the evolutionary processes that cause range shifts due to environmental change. Female beluga whales (Delphinapterus leucas) from the Baffin Bay region (BB) of the Canadian Arctic i...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ferguson, Steven, Yurkowski, David, Hudson, Justine, Edkins, Tera, Willing, Cornelia, Watt, Cortney
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Authorea, Inc. 2021
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/au.161885692.23949677/v1
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Summary:Identification of phenotypic characteristics in reproductively successful individuals provides important insights into the evolutionary processes that cause range shifts due to environmental change. Female beluga whales (Delphinapterus leucas) from the Baffin Bay region (BB) of the Canadian Arctic in the core area of the species’ geographic range have larger body size than their conspecifics at the southern range periphery in Hudson Bay (HB). We investigated the mechanism for this north and south divergence as it relates to reproductive activity (RA = total corpora) that combines morphometric data with ovarian corpora counted from female reproductive tracts. Based on the previous finding of reproductive senescence in older HB females, but not for BB whales, we compared RA patterns the of the two populations’ with age and body length. Female beluga whale RA increased more quickly with age (63% partial variation explained) in BB than in HB (41%). In contrast, body length in HB female beluga whale accounted for considerably more of the total variation (12 vs 1%) in RA compared to BB whales. We speculate that female HB beluga whale RA was more strongly linked with body length due to higher population density resulting in food competition that favors the energetic advantages of larger body size during seasonal food limitations. Understanding the evolutionary mechanism of how RA, and potentially fitness, varies across a species’ range will assist conservation efforts in anticipating and mitigating future challenges associated with a warming planet.