Detailed Record



Novel environments induce variability in fitness‐related traits


Abstract Environmental change from anthropogenic activities threatens individual organisms, the persistence of populations, and entire species. Rapid environmental change puts organisms in a double bind, they are forced to contend with novel environmental conditions but with little time to respond. Phenotypic plasticity can act quickly to promote establishment and persistence of individuals and populations in novel or altered environments. In typical environmental conditions, fitness‐related traits can be buffered, reducing phenotypic variation in expression of traits, and allowing underlying genetic variation to accumulate without selection. In stressful conditions, buffering mechanisms can break down, exposing underlying phenotypic variation, and permitting the expression of phenotypes that may allow populations to persist in the face of altered or otherwise novel environments. Using reciprocal transplant experiments of freshwater snails, we demonstrate that novel conditions induce higher variability in growth rates and, to a lesser degree, morphology (area of the shell opening) relative to natal conditions. Our findings suggest a potentially important role of phenotypic plasticity in population persistence as organisms face a rapidly changing, human‐altered world.
Authors Arielle W. Balph University of Wyoming , Amy C. Krist University of WyomingORCID
Journal Info Wiley | Ecology and Evolution , vol: 13 , iss: 6
Publication Date 6/1/2023
ISSN 2045-7758
TypeKeyword Image article
Open Access gold Gold Access
DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10165
KeywordsKeyword Image Habitat Fragmentation (Score: 0.5343) , Ecosystem Functioning (Score: 0.522549) , Environmental Flows (Score: 0.500063)