Loeuille Nicolas
iEES Paris (UMR7618), Sorbonne Université, CNRS, 4 Place Jussieu, 75005 Paris, France.
F1000Res. 2019 Jan 24;8. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.15629.1. eCollection 2019.
Past management of exploited species and of conservation issues has often ignored the evolutionary dynamics of species. During the 70s and 80s, evolution was mostly considered a slow process that may be safely ignored for most management issues. However, in recent years, examples of fast evolution have accumulated, suggesting that time scales of evolutionary dynamics (variations in genotype frequencies) and of ecological dynamics (variations in species densities) are often largely comparable, so that complex feedbacks commonly exist between the ecological and the evolutionary context ("eco-evolutionary dynamics"). While a first approach is of course to consider the evolution of a given species, in ecological communities, species are interlinked by interaction networks. In the present article, I discuss how species (co)evolution in such a network context may alter our understanding and predictions for species coexistence, given the disturbed world we live in. I review some concepts and examples suggesting that evolution may enhance the robustness of ecological networks and then show that, in many situations, the reverse may also happen, as evolutionary dynamics can harm diversity maintenance in various ways. I particularly focus on how evolution modifies indirect effects in ecological networks, then move to coevolution and discuss how the outcome of coevolution for species coexistence depends on the type of interaction (mutualistic or antagonistic) that is considered. I also review examples of phenotypes that are known to be important for ecological networks and shown to vary rapidly given global changes. Given all these components, evolution produces indirect eco-evolutionary effects within networks that will ultimately influence the optimal management of the current biodiversity crisis.
过去对受开发物种及保护问题的管理常常忽视了物种的进化动态。在20世纪70年代和80年代,进化大多被视为一个缓慢的过程,在大多数管理问题中可以放心地忽略不计。然而,近年来,快速进化的例子不断积累,这表明进化动态(基因型频率的变化)和生态动态(物种密度的变化)的时间尺度往往在很大程度上是可比的,因此生态和进化背景之间通常存在复杂的反馈(“生态 - 进化动态”)。虽然首先当然是考虑给定物种的进化,但在生态群落中,物种通过相互作用网络相互联系。在本文中,考虑到我们生活的这个受到干扰的世界,我将讨论在这样的网络背景下物种(共同)进化如何可能改变我们对物种共存的理解和预测。我回顾了一些概念和例子,表明进化可能会增强生态网络的稳健性,然后表明,在许多情况下,情况可能相反,因为进化动态可能以各种方式损害多样性的维持。我特别关注进化如何改变生态网络中的间接效应,然后转向共同进化,并讨论共同进化对物种共存的结果如何取决于所考虑的相互作用类型(互利或拮抗)。我还回顾了已知对生态网络很重要且在全球变化下显示出快速变化的表型例子。考虑到所有这些因素,进化在网络中产生间接的生态 - 进化效应,这最终将影响当前生物多样性危机的最佳管理。