4.2 Article

Contemporary climate change hinders hybrid performance of ecologically dominant marine invertebrates

Journal

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 1, Pages 60-72

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jeb.13609

Keywords

early life history stages; intertidal ecology; post-metamorph; pre-metamorph; Pyura stoloniferaspecies complex; recruitment; settlement; thermal sensitivity

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation [64801]

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Human activities alter biodiversity patterns through species extinctions and range shifts, particularly through human mediated species transfer and contemporary climate change. Hybrids may survive in environments where their parents cannot, suggesting potential for range expansion under changing conditions. However, experimental results show that hybrids perform poorly compared to parental crosses, indicating limited potential for range expansion into new environments. In contrast, the more widespread parental species exhibits better performance across a range of temperatures, suggesting better resilience to future conditions.
Human activities alter patterns of biodiversity, particularly through species extinctions and range shifts. Two of these activities are human mediated transfer of species and contemporary climate change, and both allow previously isolated genotypes to come into contact and hybridize, potentially altering speciation rates. Hybrids have been shown to survive environmental conditions not tolerated by either parent, suggesting that, under some circumstances, hybrids may be able to expand their ranges and perform well under rapidly changing conditions. However, studies assessing how hybridization influences contemporary range shifts are scarce. We performed crosses onPyura herdmaniandPyura stolonifera(Chordata, Tunicata), two closely related marine invertebrate species that are ecologically dominant and can hybridize. These sister species live in sympatry along the coasts of southern Africa, but one has a disjunct distribution that includes northern hemisphere sites. We experimentally assessed the performance of hybrid and parental crosses using different temperature regimes, including temperatures predicted under future climate change scenarios. We found that hybrids showed lower performance than parental crosses at the experimental temperatures, suggesting that hybrids are unlikely to expand their ranges to new environments. In turn, we found that the more widespread species performed better at a wide array of temperatures, indicating that this parental species may cope better with future conditions. This study illustrates how offspring fitness may provide key insights to predict range expansions and how contemporary climate change may mediate both the ability of hybrids to expand their ranges and the occurrence of speciation as a result of hybridization.

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