Climate change and evolutionary adaptation: where are we? (#9)
In this talk I provide a brief of what has been learnt from evolutionary genetic studies of climate change adaptation in natural populations of animals. I briefly outline some examples of recent rapid adaptation and provide summary of the two divergent views that have developed in the literature about the likelihood of evolutionary adaptation occurring in natural populations. Factors that contribute to these different views are briefly covered, including the nature of selection, genotype-environment interactions, population processes and the genetic architecture of traits. I then discuss the components of biodiversity that are most likely and least likely to evolve under climate change, and new insights that are starting to emerge from comparative genomics and population genomics. Implications of these findings for conservation are also mentioned.
References
Franks, S.J. Hoffmann, A.A. (2012) Genetics of climate change adaptation. Annual Review of Genetics 46:185-208
Shoo, L. et al (2013). Making decisions to conserve species under climate change. Climatic Change 119:239-246
Coleman, R.A. Weeks, A.R. Hoffmann, A.A. (2013). Balancing genetic uniqueness and genetic variation in determining conservation and translocation strategies: a comprehensive case study of threatened dwarf galaxias, Galaxiella pusilla (Mack) (Pisces: Galaxiidae). Molecular Ecology 22:1820-183