4.7 Review

Can Evolution Supply What Ecology Demands?

Journal

TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION
Volume 32, Issue 3, Pages 187-197

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE LONDON
DOI: 10.1016/j.tree.2016.12.005

Keywords

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Funding

  1. ACE
  2. Congressi Stefano Franscini
  3. Swiss National Science Foundation
  4. Royal Society Publishing
  5. ETH Zurich
  6. SNSF
  7. Finnish Academy
  8. FWO travel grant [K165716N]
  9. Swedish Research Council (V.R.)

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A simplistic view of the adaptive process pictures a hillside along which a population can climb: when ecological 'demands' change, evolution 'supplies' the variation needed for the population to climb to a new peak. Evolutionary ecologists point out that this simplistic view can be incomplete because the fitness landscape changes dynamically as the population evolves. Geneticists meanwhile have identified complexities relating to the nature of genetic varia-tion and its architecture, and the importance of epigenetic variation is under debate. In this review, we highlight how complexity in both ecological 'demands' and the evolutionary 'supply' influences organisms' ability to climb fitness landscapes that themselves change dynamically as evolution proceeds, and encourage new synthetic effort across research disciplines towards eco-logically realistic studies of adaptation.

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