Lankau Richard, Jørgensen Peter Søgaard, Harris David J, Sih Andrew
Illinois Natural History Survey, Institute of Natural Resource Sustainability, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Champaign, IL, USA.
Center for Macroecology, Evolution and Climate, Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen Universitetsparken 15, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Evol Appl. 2011 Mar;4(2):315-25. doi: 10.1111/j.1752-4571.2010.00171.x.
As policymakers and managers work to mitigate the effects of rapid anthropogenic environmental changes, they need to consider organisms' responses. In light of recent evidence that evolution can be quite rapid, this now includes evolutionary responses. Evolutionary principles have a long history in conservation biology, and the necessary next step for the field is to consider ways in which conservation policy makers and managers can proactively manipulate evolutionary processes to achieve their goals. In this review, we aim to illustrate the potential conservation benefits of an increased understanding of evolutionary history and prescriptive manipulation of three basic evolutionary factors: selection, variation, and gene flow. For each, we review and propose ways that policy makers and managers can use evolutionary thinking to preserve threatened species, combat pest species, or reduce undesirable evolutionary changes. Such evolution-based management has potential to be a highly efficient and consistent way to create greater ecological resilience to widespread, rapid, and multifaceted environmental change.
随着政策制定者和管理者努力减轻快速的人为环境变化的影响,他们需要考虑生物体的反应。鉴于最近有证据表明进化可能相当迅速,现在这还包括进化反应。进化原理在保护生物学中有着悠久的历史,该领域接下来必要的一步是考虑保护政策制定者和管理者可以如何积极地操纵进化过程以实现他们的目标。在这篇综述中,我们旨在说明增进对进化历史的理解以及对选择、变异和基因流这三个基本进化因素进行规范性操纵所带来的潜在保护效益。对于每一个因素,我们回顾并提出政策制定者和管理者可以利用进化思维来保护受威胁物种、对抗有害物种或减少不良进化变化的方法。这种基于进化的管理有可能成为一种高效且一致的方式,以增强生态系统对广泛、快速和多方面环境变化的恢复力。