School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, Australia.
School of BioSciences, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Nat Commun. 2021 Apr 13;12(1):2214. doi: 10.1038/s41467-021-22546-w.
Forecasting which species/ecosystems are most vulnerable to climate warming is essential to guide conservation strategies to minimize extinction. Tropical/mid-latitude species are predicted to be most at risk as they live close to their upper critical thermal limits (CTLs). However, these assessments assume that upper CTL estimates, such as CTmax, are accurate predictors of vulnerability and ignore the potential for evolution to ameliorate temperature increases. Here, we use experimental evolution to assess extinction risk and adaptation in tropical and widespread Drosophila species. We find tropical species succumb to extinction before widespread species. Male fertility thermal limits, which are much lower than CTmax, are better predictors of species' current distributions and extinction in the laboratory. We find little evidence of adaptive responses to warming in any species. These results suggest that species are living closer to their upper thermal limits than currently presumed and evolution/plasticity are unlikely to rescue populations from extinction.
预测哪些物种/生态系统最容易受到气候变暖的影响对于指导保护策略以最小化灭绝至关重要。热带/中纬度物种被预测为风险最大,因为它们生活在接近其上限临界热极限 (CTL) 的范围内。然而,这些评估假设上限 CTL 估计值,如 CTmax,是脆弱性的准确预测指标,而忽略了进化缓解温度升高的潜力。在这里,我们使用实验进化来评估热带和广泛分布的果蝇物种的灭绝风险和适应性。我们发现热带物种比广泛分布的物种更容易灭绝。比 CTmax 低得多的雄性生育力热极限是更好地预测物种当前分布和实验室灭绝的指标。我们几乎没有发现任何物种对变暖的适应性反应的证据。这些结果表明,与目前的假设相比,物种更接近其上限热极限,进化/可塑性不太可能将种群从灭绝中拯救出来。