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Environmental variation and biotic interactions limit adaptation at ecological margins: lessons from rainforest Drosophila and European butterflies

出版社

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2021.0017

关键词

range margins; genetic load; local adaptation; species interactions; phenotypic plasticity; field transplants

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资金

  1. NERC [NE/G007039/1, NE/N010221/1]
  2. Royal Society
  3. World Universities Network[AQ2] (WUN)
  4. NERC studentship
  5. NERC New Investigator's grant (2003)

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Models of local adaptation to spatially varying selection suggest that the interaction between adaptive potential and genetic variation determines the maximum rate of evolution. Our research on rainforest Drosophila and UK butterflies along environmental gradients shows that local adaptation is not consistently observed, genetic variation in fitness may not always be visible to selection in the field, and antagonistic interactions between species can increase the cost of adaptation. However, rapid range expansion can occur when biotic interactions evolve. Future research should investigate how environmental sensitivity of genotypes affects ecological exposure and the probability of evolutionary rescue.
Models of local adaptation to spatially varying selection predict that maximum rates of evolution are determined by the interaction between increased adaptive potential owing to increased genetic variation, and the cost genetic variation brings by reducing population fitness. We discuss existing and new results from our laboratory assays and field transplants of rainforest Drosophila and UK butterflies along environmental gradients, which try to test these predictions in natural populations. Our data suggest that: (i) local adaptation along ecological gradients is not consistently observed in time and space, especially where biotic and abiotic interactions affect both gradient steepness and genetic variation in fitness; (ii) genetic variation in fitness observed in the laboratory is only sometimes visible to selection in the field, suggesting that demographic costs can remain high without increasing adaptive potential; and (iii) antagonistic interactions between species reduce local productivity, especially at ecological margins. Such antagonistic interactions steepen gradients and may increase the cost of adaptation by increasing its dimensionality. However, where biotic interactions do evolve, rapid range expansion can follow. Future research should test how the environmental sensitivity of genotypes determines their ecological exposure, and its effects on genetic variation in fitness, to predict the probability of evolutionary rescue at ecological margins. This article is part of the theme issue 'Species' ranges in the face of changing environments (Part II)'.

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