Inventory, Forecasting and Operational Support, Forest Research, Farnham, United Kingdom.
School of Biological Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, United Kingdom.
J Evol Biol. 2024 Nov 2;37(11):1329-1344. doi: 10.1093/jeb/voae116.
Climate change is increasing mean temperatures, and intensifying heatwaves. Natural populations may respond to stress through shorter-term acclimation via plasticity and/or longer-term inter-generational evolution. However, if the pace and/or extent of thermal change is too great, local extinctions occur; one potential cause in ectotherms is identified to be the heat-liability of male reproductive biology. Recent data from several species, including the beetle Tribolium castaneum, confirmed that male reproductive biology is vulnerable to heatwaves, which may constrain populations. However, such reproductive-damage may be overestimated, if there is potential to adapt to elevated mean temperatures associated with climate change via evolution and/or acclimation. Here, we tested this to evaluate whether pre-exposures could improve heatwave tolerance (adaptation or acclimation), by experimentally evolving Tribolium castaneum populations to divergent thermal regimes (30 °C vs. 38 °C). Findings across assays revealed that relative to 30 °C-regime males, males from the 38 °C regime, maintained constantly at 8 °C warmer for 25 generations, displayed an increase; (i) in post heatwave (42 °C) reproductive fitness by 55%, (ii) survival by 33%, and (iii) 32% larger testes volumes. Unexpectedly, in the acclimation assay, warm-adapted males' post-heatwave survival and reproduction were best if they experienced cool developmental acclimation beforehand, suggesting a cost to adapting to 38 °C. These results help progress knowledge of the potential for survival and reproduction to adapt to climate change; trait specific adaptation to divergent thermal regimes can occur over relatively few generations, but this capacity depended on the interaction of evolutionary and thermal acclimatory processes.
气候变化正在导致平均气温升高,并使热浪更加剧烈。自然种群可能通过可塑性在短期内适应,或通过代际进化在长期上适应压力。然而,如果温度变化的速度和/或幅度太大,就会导致局部灭绝;在变温动物中,一个潜在的原因是雄性生殖生物学对热的脆弱性。最近来自几个物种的研究数据,包括甲虫赤拟谷盗,证实了雄性生殖生物学易受热浪的影响,这可能会限制种群。然而,如果有通过进化和/或适应来适应与气候变化相关的升高的平均温度的潜力,那么这种生殖损伤可能会被高估。在这里,我们通过实验进化赤拟谷盗种群到不同的热环境(30°C 与 38°C)来测试这一点,以评估预先暴露是否可以提高对热浪的耐受性(适应或适应)。在整个实验中发现,与 30°C 条件下的雄性相比,在 38°C 条件下持续 25 代,温度高 8°C 的条件下进化的雄性,表现出:(i)热后(42°C)生殖适应性提高 55%,(ii)存活率提高 33%,以及(iii)睾丸体积增加 32%。出乎意料的是,在适应实验中,如果先前经历过凉爽的发育适应,那么适应温暖的雄性在热后生存和繁殖的表现最佳,这表明适应 38°C 存在代价。这些结果有助于增进对生存和繁殖适应气候变化潜力的认识;对不同热环境的特定特征的适应可以在相对较少的几代中发生,但这种能力取决于进化和热适应过程的相互作用。