When evolution is the solution to pollution: Key principles, and lessons from rapid repeated adaptation of killifish (Fundulus heteroclitus) populations

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: When evolution is the solution to pollution: Key principles, and lessons from rapid repeated adaptation of killifish (Fundulus heteroclitus) populations
المؤلفون: Bryan W. Clark, Andrew Whitehead, Noah M. Reid, Diane Nacci, Mark E. Hahn
المصدر: Evolutionary Applications
بيانات النشر: John Wiley and Sons Inc., 2017.
سنة النشر: 2017
مصطلحات موضوعية: 0301 basic medicine, ecological genetics, natural selection and contemporary evolution, Population, Environmental pollution, adaptation, 010501 environmental sciences, 01 natural sciences, ecotoxicology, 03 medical and health sciences, genomics/proteomics, Molecular evolution, Genetics, 14. Life underwater, Killifish, education, Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, population genetics—empirical, 0105 earth and related environmental sciences, education.field_of_study, biology, Ecology, molecular evolution, 15. Life on land, biology.organism_classification, Ecological genetics, Genetic architecture, Fundulus, Review and Syntheses, 030104 developmental biology, 13. Climate action, Adaptation, General Agricultural and Biological Sciences, contemporary evolution, Reviews and Syntheses
الوصف: For most species, evolutionary adaptation is not expected to be sufficiently rapid to buffer the effects of human‐mediated environmental changes, including environmental pollution. Here we review how key features of populations, the characteristics of environmental pollution, and the genetic architecture underlying adaptive traits, may interact to shape the likelihood of evolutionary rescue from pollution. Large populations of Atlantic killifish (Fundulus heteroclitus) persist in some of the most contaminated estuaries of the United States, and killifish studies have provided some of the first insights into the types of genomic changes that enable rapid evolutionary rescue from complexly degraded environments. We describe how selection by industrial pollutants and other stressors has acted on multiple populations of killifish and posit that extreme nucleotide diversity uniquely positions this species for successful evolutionary adaptation. Mechanistic studies have identified some of the genetic underpinnings of adaptation to a well‐studied class of toxic pollutants; however, multiple genetic regions under selection in wild populations seem to reflect more complex responses to diverse native stressors and/or compensatory responses to primary adaptation. The discovery of these pollution‐adapted killifish populations suggests that the evolutionary influence of anthropogenic stressors as selective agents occurs widely. Yet adaptation to chemical pollution in terrestrial and aquatic vertebrate wildlife may rarely be a successful “solution to pollution” because potentially adaptive phenotypes may be complex and incur fitness costs, and therefore be unlikely to evolve quickly enough, especially in species with small population sizes.
اللغة: English
تدمد: 1752-4571
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::cf2bedf54e7091665f5cdfe288436ca7
http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5680427
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....cf2bedf54e7091665f5cdfe288436ca7
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE