1 Division of Ecology and Evolution, Australian National University , Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 2601 , Australia.
2 ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University , Townsville, Queensland 4810 , Australia.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2019 Mar 18;374(1768):20180174. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2018.0174.
How populations and species respond to modified environmental conditions is critical to their persistence both now and into the future, particularly given the increasing pace of environmental change. The process of adaptation to novel environmental conditions can occur via two mechanisms: (1) the expression of phenotypic plasticity (the ability of one genotype to express varying phenotypes when exposed to different environmental conditions), and (2) evolution via selection for particular phenotypes, resulting in the modification of genetic variation in the population. Plasticity, because it acts at the level of the individual, is often hailed as a rapid-response mechanism that will enable organisms to adapt and survive in our rapidly changing world. But plasticity can also retard adaptation by shifting the distribution of phenotypes in the population, shielding it from natural selection. In addition to which, not all plastic responses are adaptive-now well-documented in cases of ecological traps. In this theme issue, we aim to present a considered view of plasticity and the role it could play in facilitating or hindering adaption to environmental change. This introduction provides a re-examination of our current understanding of the role of phenotypic plasticity in adaptation and sets the theme issue's contributions in their broader context. Four key themes emerge: the need to measure plasticity across both space and time; the importance of the past in predicting the future; the importance of the link between plasticity and sexual selection; and the need to understand more about the nature of selection on plasticity itself. We conclude by advocating the need for cross-disciplinary collaborations to settle the question of whether plasticity will promote or retard species' rates of adaptation to ever-more stressful environmental conditions. This article is part of the theme issue 'The role of plasticity in phenotypic adaptation to rapid environmental change'.
种群和物种对环境变化的反应方式对于它们现在和未来的生存至关重要,尤其是考虑到环境变化的步伐正在加快。适应新环境条件的过程可以通过两种机制发生:(1)表现出表型可塑性(一种基因型在暴露于不同环境条件时表达不同表型的能力),和(2)通过选择特定表型进行进化,从而导致种群遗传变异的改变。可塑性,因为它作用于个体水平,通常被吹捧为一种快速反应机制,使生物能够在我们快速变化的世界中适应和生存。但是,可塑性也可以通过改变种群中表型的分布来减缓适应,从而使其免受自然选择的影响。除此之外,并非所有的可塑性反应都是适应性的——在生态陷阱的情况下,这一点现在已经得到了很好的证明。在本期主题中,我们旨在对可塑性及其在促进或阻碍对环境变化的适应方面可能发挥的作用提出深思熟虑的观点。这篇介绍性文章重新审视了我们对表型可塑性在适应中的作用的现有理解,并将主题问题的贡献置于更广泛的背景下。出现了四个关键主题:需要在空间和时间上都测量可塑性;了解过去对预测未来的重要性;可塑性与性选择之间联系的重要性;以及需要更多地了解对可塑性本身的选择的本质。最后,我们主张需要跨学科合作来解决可塑性是否会促进或减缓物种对越来越多的压力环境条件的适应速度的问题。本文是主题为“可塑性在快速环境变化下表型适应中的作用”的一部分。