Egizi Andrea, Fefferman Nina H, Fonseca Dina M
Department of Entomology, Center for Vector Biology, Rutgers University, 180 Jones Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA Graduate Program in Ecology, Evolution, and Natural Resources, Rutgers University, 14 College Farm Road, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA.
Graduate Program in Ecology, Evolution, and Natural Resources, Rutgers University, 14 College Farm Road, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA Department of Ecology, Evolution and Natural Resources, Rutgers University, 14 College Farm Road, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2015 Apr 5;370(1665). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2014.0136.
Projected impacts of climate change on vector-borne disease dynamics must consider many variables relevant to hosts, vectors and pathogens, including how altered environmental characteristics might affect the spatial distributions of vector species. However, many predictive models for vector distributions consider their habitat requirements to be fixed over relevant time-scales, when they may actually be capable of rapid evolutionary change and even adaptation. We examine the genetic signature of a spatial expansion by an invasive vector into locations with novel temperature conditions compared to its native range as a proxy for how existing vector populations may respond to temporally changing habitat. Specifically, we compare invasions into different climate ranges and characterize the importance of selection from the invaded habitat. We demonstrate that vector species can exhibit evolutionary responses (altered allelic frequencies) to a temperature gradient in as little as 7-10 years even in the presence of high gene flow, and further, that this response varies depending on the strength of selection. We interpret these findings in the context of climate change predictions for vector populations and emphasize the importance of incorporating vector evolution into models of future vector-borne disease dynamics.
气候变化对媒介传播疾病动态的预估影响必须考虑许多与宿主、媒介和病原体相关的变量,包括环境特征的改变如何影响媒介物种的空间分布。然而,许多媒介分布的预测模型认为其栖息地需求在相关时间尺度上是固定的,而实际上它们可能能够迅速进化甚至适应。我们研究了一种入侵性媒介向与原生范围相比具有新温度条件的地点进行空间扩张的遗传特征,以此作为现有媒介种群如何应对随时间变化的栖息地的一个指标。具体而言,我们比较了入侵到不同气候范围的情况,并描述了来自入侵栖息地的选择的重要性。我们证明,即使在基因流动较高的情况下,媒介物种在短短7至10年内就可以对温度梯度表现出进化反应(等位基因频率改变),而且,这种反应因选择强度而异。我们在对媒介种群的气候变化预测背景下解释这些发现,并强调将媒介进化纳入未来媒介传播疾病动态模型的重要性。