4.6 Article

Urban rendezvous along the seashore: Ports as Darwinian field labs for studying marine evolution in the Anthropocene

Journal

EVOLUTIONARY APPLICATIONS
Volume 16, Issue 2, Pages 560-579

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/eva.13443

Keywords

admixture; biological portuarization; harbors; human-induced evolution; invasive species; marinas; ocean sprawl

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Portuarization, the repeated evolution of marine species in port ecosystems under human-altered selective pressures, drives various evolutionary processes including establishment of new connectivity hubs, adaptive responses to new chemicals or biotic communities, and hybridization between lineages. However, there are still important knowledge gaps and further research is needed to understand this phenomenon better.
Humans have built ports on all the coasts of the world, allowing people to travel, exploit the sea, and develop trade. The proliferation of these artificial habitats and the associated maritime traffic is not predicted to fade in the coming decades. Ports share common characteristics: Species find themselves in novel singular environments, with particular abiotic properties-e.g., pollutants, shading, protection from wave action-within novel communities in a melting pot of invasive and native taxa. Here, we discuss how this drives evolution, including setting up of new connectivity hubs and gateways, adaptive responses to exposure to new chemicals or new biotic communities, and hybridization between lineages that would have never come into contact naturally. There are still important knowledge gaps, however, such as the lack of experimental tests to distinguish adaptation from acclimation processes, the lack of studies to understand the putative threats of port lineages to natural populations or to better understand the outcomes and fitness effects of anthropogenic hybridization. We thus call for further research examining biological portuarization, defined as the repeated evolution of marine species in port ecosystems under human-altered selective pressures. Furthermore, we argue that ports act as giant mesocosms often isolated from the open sea by seawalls and locks and so provide replicated life-size evolutionary experiments essential to support predictive evolutionary sciences.

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