Collections de documents électroniques
RECHERCHER

Will life find a way? Evolution of marine species under global change

Téléchargements

Téléchargements par mois depuis la dernière année

Plus de statistiques...

Calosi, Piero ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3378-2603, De Wit, Pierre, Thor, Peter et Dupont, Sam (2016). Will life find a way? Evolution of marine species under global change. Evolutionary Applications, 9 (9). pp. 1035-1042.

[thumbnail of Piero_calosi_et_al_aout2016.pdf]
Prévisualisation
PDF
Télécharger (86kB) | Prévisualisation

Résumé

Projections of marine biodiversity and implementation of effective actions for its maintenance in the face of current rapid global environmental change are constrained by our limited understanding of species’ adaptive responses, including transgenerational plasticity, epigenetics and natural selection. This special issue presents 13 novel studies, which employ experimental and modelling approaches to (i) investigate plastic and evolutionary responses of marine species to major global change drivers; (ii) ask relevant broad eco-evolutionary questions, implementing multiple species and populations studies; (iii) show the advantages of using advanced experimental designs and tools; (iv) construct novel model organisms for marine evolution; (v) help identifying future challenges for the field; and (vi) highlight the importance of incorporating existing evolutionary theory into management solutions for the marine realm. What emerges is that at least some populations of marine species have the ability to adapt to future global change conditions. However, marine organisms’ capacity for adaptation appears finite, due to evolutionary trade-offs and possible rapid losses in genetic diversity. This further corroborates the idea that acquiring an evolutionary perspective on how marine life will respond to the selective pressure of future global changes will guide us in better identifying which conservation efforts will be most needed and most effective. -- Keywords : marine evolution ; ocean warming ; ocean acidification ; salinity ; phenotypic plasticity ; local adaptation ; rapid adaptation ; epigenetics ; evolutionary modeling ; transgenerational responses ; DNA methylation ; common garden experiment.

Type de document : Article
Validation par les pairs : Oui
Information complémentaire : CC BY
Version du document déposé : Version officielle de l'éditeur
Départements et unités départementales : Département de biologie, chimie et géographie
Déposé par : DIUQAR UQAR
Date de dépôt : 04 avr. 2023 20:23
Dernière modification : 02 oct. 2023 14:37
URI : https://semaphore.uqar.ca/id/eprint/2163

Actions (administrateurs uniquement)

Éditer la notice Éditer la notice