The potential for evolutionary rescue in an Arctic seashore plant threatened by climate change

被引:1
作者
Mattila, Anniina L. K. [1 ]
Opedal, Oystein H. [4 ]
Hallfors, Maria H. [2 ,5 ]
Pietikainen, Laura [1 ]
Koivusaari, Susanna H. M. [1 ,3 ]
Hyvarinen, Marko-Tapio [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Helsinki, Bot & Mycol Unit, Finnish Museum Nat Hist, Helsinki, Finland
[2] Univ Helsinki, Res Ctr Ecol Change, Organismal & Evolutionary Biol Res Programme, Helsinki, Finland
[3] Univ Helsinki, Dept Geosci & Geog, Helsinki, Finland
[4] Lund Univ, Dept Biol, Lund, Sweden
[5] Finnish Environm Inst SYKE, Nat Solut, Helsinki, Finland
基金
芬兰科学院; 瑞典研究理事会;
关键词
evolutionary potential; evolvability; G-matrix; evolutionary rescue; climate change adaptation; pollinator decline; G-MATRIX; COMPARING EVOLVABILITY; PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY; ADAPTIVE EVOLUTION; VEGETATIVE TRAITS; NATURAL-SELECTION; POPULATION-SIZE; ADAPTATION; CONSEQUENCES; CONSTRAINT;
D O I
10.1098/rspb.2024.1351
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The impacts of climate change may be particularly severe for geographically isolated populations, which must adjust through plastic responses or evolve. Here, we study an endangered Arctic plant, Primula nutans ssp. finmarchica, confined to Fennoscandian seashores and showing indications of maladaptation to warming climate. We evaluate the potential of these populations to evolve to facilitate survival in the rapidly warming Arctic (i.e. evolutionary rescue) by utilizing manual crossing experiments in a nested half-sibling breeding design. We estimate G-matrices, evolvability and genetic constraints in traits with potentially conflicting selection pressures. To explicitly evaluate the potential for climate change adaptation, we infer the expected time to evolve from a northern to a southern phenotype under different selection scenarios, using demographic and climatic data to relate expected evolutionary rates to projected rates of climate change. Our results indicate that, given the nearly 10-fold greater evolvability of vegetative than of floral traits, adaptation in these traits may take place nearly in concert with changing climate, given effective climate mitigation. However, the comparatively slow expected evolutionary modification of floral traits may hamper the evolution of floral traits to track climate-induced changes in pollination environment, compromising sexual reproduction and thus reducing the likelihood of evolutionary rescue.
引用
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页数:12
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