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A Trade-Off between Robustness to Environmental Fluctuations and Speed of Evolution
Author(s) -
Max Schmid,
Maria Paniw,
Maarten Postuma,
Arpat Özgül,
Frédéric Guillaume
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
the american naturalist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.954
H-Index - 205
eISSN - 1537-5323
pISSN - 0003-0147
DOI - 10.1086/719654
Subject(s) - evolvability , robustness (evolution) , trait , environmental change , extinction (optical mineralogy) , extinction debt , maladaptation , ecology , climate change , biology , evolutionary dynamics , evolutionary ecology , evolutionary biology , biodiversity , population , habitat destruction , demography , computer science , paleontology , biochemistry , genetics , sociology , gene , programming language , host (biology)
AbstractUnderstanding how a species' life history affects its capacity to cope with environmental changes is important in the context of rapid climate changes. Reinterpreting previous results from a well-developed theoretical framework, we show that a trade-off exists between a species' ability to genetically adapt to long-term gradual environmental changes and its ability to demographically resist short-term environmental perturbations, causing variation in its vital rates. Surprisingly, this important insight has not been made formally explicit before. Choosing archetypal life histories along the fast-slow pace-of-life continuum and modeling their eco-evolutionary dynamics, we further show that long-lived species have larger demographic robustness to interannual fluctuations but limited trait evolutionary responses in gradually changing environments. In contrast, short-lived species had larger evolvability but reduced demographic robustness. This trade-off bears heavily on extinction probabilities of populations tracking fast trait changes in stochastic environments. Faster trait evolution in short-lived species came at the expense of their higher sensitivity to short-term fluctuations, causing higher extinction rates than for long-lived species. Long-lived species persisted better on short timescales but built maladaptation and an extinction debt over time. This work shows how modeling species' eco-evolutionary dynamics can help to assess species vulnerability to environmental changes.

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