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Similar plastic responses to elevated temperature among different‐sized brook trout populations
Author(s) -
Wood Jacquelyn L. A.,
Fraser Dylan J.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.144
H-Index - 294
eISSN - 1939-9170
pISSN - 0012-9658
DOI - 10.1890/14-1378.1
Subject(s) - phenotypic plasticity , biology , ecology , population , habitat , plasticity , habitat fragmentation , trout , population size , local adaptation , adaptation (eye) , demography , physics , sociology , fishery , fish <actinopterygii> , thermodynamics , neuroscience
The potential influence of population size on the magnitude of phenotypic plasticity, a key factor in adaptation to environmental change, has rarely been studied. Conventionally, small populations might exhibit consistently lower plasticity than large populations if small population habitats are generally poor in quality and if genetic diversity underpinning plasticity is lost as population size is reduced. Alternatively, small populations might exhibit (1) consistently higher plasticity as a response to the increased environmental variation that can accompany habitat fragment size reduction or (2) greater variability in plasticity, as fragmentation can increase variability in habitat types. We explored these alternatives by investigating plasticity to increasing temperature in a common garden experiment using eight fragmented populations of brook trout varying nearly 50‐fold in census size (179–8416) and 10‐fold in effective number of breeders (18–135). Across six early‐life‐history traits and three temperatures, we found almost no evidence for differences in either the magnitude or variability of plasticity in relation to population size, despite that one temperature represented an extreme climate warming scenario. The documentation of similar plastic responses of small and large populations suggests that phenotypic plasticity is not reduced as population size decreases, and that even very small populations of some species might have the ability to respond to climate change.

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