摘要

Environmental constraints on life-history traits are expected to increase with seasonality in resources such as food and appropriate breeding habitat. Seasonality is highest at polar latitudes, where environmental constraints can be stronger than biotic factors, such as density and its effect on intraspecific competition. In this study, the age structure, body-length distribution, mortality, and density were studied and compared among five beluga populations of the Canadian Arctic: eastern Beaufort Sea (EBS), Baffin Bay (BB), Cumberland Sound (CS), western (WHB), and eastern Hudson (EHB) Bay, to test the prediction that density-dependent effects on these life-history traits should be inversely related to latitude. Growth, but not mortality, showed a significant positive relationship with latitude. Winter density also increased with winter latitude, consistent with the prediction of greater risk of mortality associated with density-independent effects, such as ice entrapment in winter. Age distributions differed among populations, with animals harvested at the highest-latitude population (EBS) being the oldest and attaining the longest adult body lengths, compared to lower-latitude populations (WHB and EHB). The latitudinal variation in growth, adult body size, and winter density is congruent with the hypothesis that environmental seasonality may impose stronger constraints on life-history traits of beluga with increasing latitude.

  • 出版日期2010-2