Department of Biology, Washington University, St Louis, MO 63130, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2011 Apr 5;108(14):5655-60. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1012302108. Epub 2011 Mar 14.
Anthropogenic climate change may threaten many species with extinction. However, species at risk today survived global climate change in recent geological history. Describing how habitat tracking and adaptation allowed species to survive warming since the end of the Pleistocene can indicate the relative importance of dispersal and natural selection during climate change. By taking this historical perspective, we can identify how contemporary climate change could interfere with these mechanisms and threaten the most vulnerable species. We focused on a group of closely related plant species in the genus Dodecatheon (Primulaceae) in eastern North America. Two rare species (Dodecatheon amethystinum and Dodecatheon frenchii) that are endemic to patchy cool cliffs may be glacial relicts whose ranges constricted following the last glacial maximum. Alternatively, these species may be extreme ecotypes of a single widespread species (Dodecatheon meadia) that quickly adapted to microclimatic differences among habitats. We test support for these alternative scenarios by combining ecophysiological and population genetic data at a regional scale. An important ecophysiological trait distinguishes rare species from D. meadia, but only a few northern populations of D. amethystinum are genetically distinctive. These relict populations indicate that habitat tracking did occur with historical climate change. However, relatively stronger evidence for isolation by distance and admixture suggests that local adaptation and genetic introgression have been at least as important. The complex response of Dodecatheon to historical climate change suggests that contemporary conservation efforts should accommodate evolutionary processes, in some cases by restoring genetic connectivity between ecologically differentiated populations.
人为气候变化可能使许多物种面临灭绝的威胁。然而,今天处于危险之中的物种在最近的地质历史中经历了全球气候变化。描述物种如何通过追踪和适应栖息地来在更新世末期以来的变暖过程中生存,可以说明在气候变化过程中扩散和自然选择的相对重要性。通过这种历史视角,我们可以确定当代气候变化如何干扰这些机制,并威胁到最脆弱的物种。我们关注的是北美东部的 Dodecatheon 属(报春花科)的一组密切相关的植物物种。两种稀有种(Dodecatheon amethystinum 和 Dodecatheon frenchii),它们是局限于局部凉爽悬崖的特有种,可能是冰川遗留种,其范围在末次冰期最大值后缩小。或者,这些物种可能是单一广泛分布物种(Dodecatheon meadia)的极端生态型,能够快速适应栖息地之间的微气候差异。我们通过在区域尺度上结合生理生态和种群遗传数据来检验这些替代情景的支持程度。一个重要的生理生态特征将稀有种与 D. meadia 区分开来,但只有少数北部的 D. amethystinum 种群在遗传上具有独特性。这些残余种群表明,随着历史气候变化,确实发生了栖息地追踪。然而,相对更强的距离隔离和杂种优势的证据表明,局部适应和遗传渐渗至少同样重要。Dodecatheon 对历史气候变化的复杂反应表明,当代保护工作应该适应进化过程,在某些情况下,通过恢复生态分化种群之间的遗传连通性来实现。