4.7 Article

Local adaptation in brown trout early life-history traits: implications for climate change adaptability

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 275, Issue 1653, Pages 2859-2868

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2008.0870

Keywords

common-garden experiment; global warming; natural selection; phenotypic plasticity; Q(ST) versus F-ST; reaction norm

Funding

  1. International School of Biodiversity Sciences (ISOBIS)
  2. Danish Natural Science Research Council [272-050202, 21-01-0526, 21-03-0125]
  3. Danish Rod License Funds
  4. Marie Curie Transfer of Knowledge Fellowship BIORESC
  5. EU Sixth Framework Programme [MTKD-CT-2005-029957]
  6. European Science Foundation ConGen Programme

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Knowledge of local adaptation and adaptive potential of natural populations is becoming increasingly relevant due to anthropogenic changes in the environment, such as climate change. The concern is that populations will be negatively affected by increasing temperatures without the capacity to adapt. Temperature-related adaptability in traits related to phenology and early life history are expected to be particularly important in salmonid fishes. We focused on the latter and investigated whether four populations of brown trout (Salmo trutta) are locally adapted in early life-history traits. These populations spawn in rivers that experience different temperature conditions during the time of incubation of eggs and embryos. They were reared in a common-garden experiment at three different temperatures. Quantitative genetic differentiation (Q(ST)) exceeded neutral molecular differentiation (F-ST) for two traits, indicating local adaptation. A temperature effect was observed for three traits. However, this effect varied among populations due to locally adapted reaction norms, corresponding to the temperature regimes experienced by the populations in their native environments. Additive genetic variance and heritable variation in phenotypic plasticity suggest that although increasing temperatures are likely to affect some populations negatively, they may have the potential to adapt to changing temperature regimes.

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