Abstract

I summarize marine studies on plastic versus adaptive responses to global change. Due to the lack of time series, this review focuses largely on the potential for adaptive evolution in marine animals and plants. The approaches were mainly synchronic comparisons of phenotypically divergent populations, substituting spatial contrasts in temperature or CO2 environments for temporal changes, or in assessments of adaptive genetic diversity within populations for traits important under global change. The available literature is biased towards gastropods, crustaceans, cnidarians and macroalgae. Focal traits were mostly environmental tolerances, which correspond to phenotypic buffering, a plasticity type that maintains a functional phenotype despite external disturbance. Almost all studies address coastal species that are already today exposed to fluctuations in temperature, pH and oxygen levels. Recommendations for future research include (i) initiation and analyses of observational and experimental temporal studies encompassing diverse phenotypic traits (including diapausing cues, dispersal traits, reproductive timing, morphology) (ii) quantification of nongenetic trans-generational effects along with components of additive genetic variance (iii) adaptive changes in microbe–host associations under the holobiont model in response to global change (iv) evolution of plasticity patterns under increasingly fluctuating environments and extreme conditions and (v) joint consideration of demography and evolutionary adaptation in evolutionary rescue approaches.

Highlights

  • The ocean is by far the largest habitat on planet Earth

  • Due to the lack of time series, this review focuses largely on the potential for adaptive evolution in marine animals and plants

  • Focal traits were mostly environmental tolerances, which correspond to phenotypic buffering, a plasticity type that maintains a functional phenotype despite external disturbance

Read more

Summary

Evolutionary Applications

Climate change in the oceans: evolutionary versus phenotypically plastic responses of marine animals and plants. GEOMAR Helmholtz-Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, Marine Ecology – Evolutionary Ecology of Marine Fishes, Kiel, Germany. Genetic diversity, ocean acidification, ocean warming, phenotypic buffering, physiological tolerance, selection

Introduction
Modes of evolution and selection in the brave new ocean
Evidence from synchronic approaches
Seagrasses Selection for opportunity
Assessing within population adaptive genetic diversity
Bembicium vittatum
Acropora millepora Acropora millepora Mytilus trossolus Petrolisthes cinctipes
Evolutionary projections
The evolution of reaction norms
Findings
Literature cited
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call