Abstract

Global reduction in snow cover duration is one of the most consistent and widespread climate change outcomes. Declining snow duration has severe negative consequences for diverse taxa including seasonally color molting species, which rely on snow for camouflage. However, phenotypic plasticity may facilitate adaptation to reduced snow duration. Plastic responses could occur in the color molt phenology or through behavior that minimizes coat color mismatch or its consequences. We quantified molt phenology of 200 wild snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus), and measured microhabitat choice and local snow cover. Similar to other studies, we found that hares did not show behavioral plasticity to minimize coat color mismatch via background matching; instead they preferred colder, snow free areas regardless of their coat color. Furthermore, hares did not behaviorally mitigate the negative consequences of mismatch by choosing resting sites with denser vegetation cover when mismatched. Importantly, we demonstrated plasticity in the initiation and the rate of the molt and established the direct effect of snow on molt phenology; greater snow cover was associated with whiter hares and this association was not due to whiter hares preferring snowier areas. However, despite the observed snow-mediated plasticity in molt phenology, camouflage mismatch with white hares on brown snowless ground persisted and was more frequent during early snowmelt. Thus, we find no evidence that phenotypic plasticity in snowshoe hares is sufficient to facilitate adaptive rescue to camouflage mismatch under climate change.

Highlights

  • The detrimental effects of climate change on the fitness of wild populations may be ameliorated by adaptation (Hoffmann and Sgró 2011)

  • We found a strong effect of snow cover on snowshoe hare molt phenology using data from 200 hares over 6 years, even after controlling for date

  • Phenotypic plasticity can enable rapid adaptation to climate change (Gienapp et al 2008; Beever et al 2017; Snell-Rood et al 2018), ecologists often lack an understanding of mechanisms underlying adaptive phenotypic plasticity, and the extent to which plasticity can reduce or eliminate phenological mismatches between seasonal biotic processes and abiotic climate variables

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The detrimental effects of climate change on the fitness of wild populations may be ameliorated by adaptation (Hoffmann and Sgró 2011). Local adaptation to rapid environmental change may occur through both evolution via natural selection (i.e., evolutionary rescue (Vander Wal et al 2013)) and phenotypic plasticity (Ghalambor and Martin 2001). Both mechanisms are possible and can interact. We demonstrate that snow itself can directly affect phenotypic plasticity. We connect this plasticity to adaptive rescue in a charismatic and topical system: climate change effects on hares.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
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