Zarri Liam J, Kraft Clifford E, McIntyre Peter B, Baetscher Diana S, Jirka Kurt J, Randall Eileen A, Marcy-Quay Benjamin, St John Carl A, Sethi Suresh A, Airey Montana E, Detmer Thomas M, Flecker Alexander S, Therkildsen Nina O
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, NY 14853.
Department of Natural Resources and the Environment, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, NY 14853.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Jun 17;122(24):e2424067122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2424067122. Epub 2025 Jun 9.
Species invasions spur costly and labor-intensive control efforts, yet even local eradication is seldom achieved. When control measures are initially effective, they may drive evolutionary adaptation that prevents full eradication, as has been documented for some chemical and biocontrol approaches. Although the intensity, directionality, and persistence of selection required to increase the frequency of resistant genotypes in complex natural ecosystems remains an open question, theory predicts that high mortality can cause life-history evolution even in the absence of a strong selective agent. Here, we use annually collected ecological and genetic data to show that rapid evolution of introduced smallmouth bass has undermined a 20-y manual suppression effort in a mid-sized lake. Despite nearly doubling annual mortality, our intensive control program produced a larger bass population dominated by young and early-maturing fish. These shifts were accompanied by large allele frequency changes in three genomic regions associated with earlier maturation and increased somatic growth. Our findings bear out the theoretical prediction that high mortality can drive evolutionary adaptation in target species. Controlling species invasions are worldwide practices that typically remove a substantial proportion of a population during each of many successive generations, hence life history adaptation may be commonplace. Such evolutionary responses could be salient in explaining the widespread failure of invasion control efforts. Genetic and phenotypic monitoring to detect cryptic adaptation and preemptive design of invader eradication programs to deliberately disrupt directional selection for resistance could improve invasion control outcomes.
物种入侵促使人们开展成本高昂且 labor-intensive 的控制工作,但即便在局部地区也很少能实现根除。当控制措施最初有效时,它们可能会推动进化适应,从而阻碍彻底根除,就像一些化学和生物防治方法所记录的那样。尽管在复杂的自然生态系统中,增加抗性基因型频率所需的选择强度、方向性和持续性仍是一个悬而未决的问题,但理论预测,即使没有强大的选择因子,高死亡率也会导致生活史进化。在此,我们利用每年收集的生态和遗传数据表明,引入的小口黑鲈的快速进化破坏了一个中型湖泊长达 20 年的人工抑制努力。尽管年死亡率几乎翻倍,但我们的强化控制计划却产生了一个更大的鲈鱼种群,该种群以幼鱼和早熟鱼为主。这些变化伴随着与早熟和体细胞生长增加相关的三个基因组区域的等位基因频率大幅变化。我们的研究结果证实了高死亡率会推动目标物种进化适应的理论预测。控制物种入侵是全球通行的做法,通常在许多连续世代的每一代中都会去除相当比例的种群,因此生活史适应可能很常见。这种进化反应在解释入侵控制努力普遍失败方面可能很突出。进行遗传和表型监测以检测隐秘适应,并对入侵者根除计划进行前瞻性设计以故意扰乱对抗性的定向选择,可能会改善入侵控制结果。