Larger body size leads to greater female beluga fitness at the southern
periphery of their range
Abstract
Identifying phenotypic characteristics of evolutionarily fit individuals
provides important insight into the evolutionary processes that cause
range shifts with climate warming. Female beluga whales (Delphinapterus
leucas) from the Canadian high Arctic (BB) residing in the core region
of the species’ geographic range are 14% larger than their conspecifics
at the southern periphery in Hudson Bay (HB). We investigated the causal
mechanism for this north (core)-south (periphery) difference as it
relates to fitness by combining morphometric data with ovarian corpora
counted in female reproductive tracts. We found evidence for
reproductive senescence in older HB females from the southern peripheral
population but not for BB whales. Female beluga whale fitness in the
more-northern BB increased faster with age (48% partial variation
explained) versus a more gradual slope (25%) in HB. In contrast, body
length in HB female beluga accounted for five times more of the total
variation in fitness compared to BB whales. We speculate that female HB
beluga fitness was more strongly linked with body length due to higher
density, as larger body size provides survival advantages during
seasonal food limitations. Understanding the evolutionary mechanism of
how fitness changes will assist conservation efforts in anticipating and
mitigating future challenges to peripheral populations.