4.6 Article

Resolving the consequences of gradual phenotypic plasticity for populations in variable environments

Journal

ECOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS
Volume 91, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecm.1478

Keywords

acclimation; ecological forecasting; environmental variation; gradual plasticity; performance landscapes; phenotypic plasticity; phytoplankton; Reed Lake; temperature

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Funding

  1. Reed College
  2. National Science Foundation [DEB 1856415, DEB 1856279, OCE 1638958]

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This study examines the phenotypic plasticity in response to environmental change, focusing particularly on gradual phenotype changes and their ecological consequences. Experimental results suggest the importance of gradual plasticity in certain environmental contexts, and the developed mathematical model shows better explanatory power for population dynamics in variable environments. Understanding and considering the ecological effects of plasticity in variable environments are crucial for making accurate predictions and advancing ecology.
Phenotypic adjustments following environmental change are ubiquitous, and trait changes arising through phenotypic plasticity often lag behind their environmental stimuli. Evolutionary biologists seeking to understand how adaptive plasticity can evolve have extensively studied this phenomenon. However, the ecological consequences of common features of plastic responses to environmental variability, including gradual phenotypic change (i.e., slower than the pace of environmental change), are underappreciated. We present a framework based on the unifying concept of phenotype x environment performance landscapes that encompasses gradual plasticity. Then, we experimentally investigate the environmental contexts where gradual plasticity is important, using freshwater phytoplankton populations exposed to thermal variation. Finally, based on our conceptual framework, we develop a mathematical model of gradual plasticity that explains population dynamics in variable environments better than common alternative models. Understanding and accounting for the ecological effects of plasticity in variable environments is critical to making vital predictions and advancing ecology.

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