Adaptation and gene flow are insufficient to rescue a montane plant under climate change

IF 44.7 1区 综合性期刊 Q1 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
Science Pub Date : 2025-05-01
Jill T. Anderson, Megan L. DeMarche, Derek A. Denney, Ian Breckheimer, James Santangelo, Susana M. Wadgymar
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Climate change increasingly drives local population dynamics, shifts geographic distributions, and threatens persistence. Gene flow and rapid adaptation could rescue declining populations yet are seldom integrated into forecasts. We modeled eco-evolutionary dynamics under preindustrial, contemporary, and projected climates using up to 9 years of fitness data from 102,272 transplants (115 source populations) of Boechera stricta in five common gardens. Climate change endangers locally adapted populations and reduces genotypic variation in long-term population growth rate, suggesting limited adaptive potential. Upslope migration could stabilize high-elevation populations and preserve low-elevation ecotypes, but unassisted gene flow modeled with genomic data is too spatially restricted. Species distribution models failed to capture current dynamics and likely overestimate persistence under intermediate emissions scenarios, highlighting the importance of modeling evolutionary processes.
适应和基因流动不足以拯救气候变化下的山地植物
气候变化日益推动当地人口动态,改变地理分布,并威胁到持久性。基因流动和快速适应可以挽救不断下降的人口,但很少被纳入预测。我们利用5个普通园林中102272株(115个源种群)的适应度数据,模拟了工业化前、现代和预测气候下的生态进化动态。气候变化危及当地适应的种群,并降低了长期种群增长率的基因型变异,表明适应潜力有限。上坡迁移可以稳定高海拔种群并保持低海拔生态型,但用基因组数据模拟的无辅助基因流动在空间上太受限制。物种分布模型未能捕捉到当前的动态,并且可能高估了中等排放情景下的持久性,这突出了模拟进化过程的重要性。
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来源期刊
Science
Science 综合性期刊-综合性期刊
CiteScore
61.10
自引率
0.90%
发文量
0
审稿时长
2.1 months
期刊介绍: Science is a leading outlet for scientific news, commentary, and cutting-edge research. Through its print and online incarnations, Science reaches an estimated worldwide readership of more than one million. Science’s authorship is global too, and its articles consistently rank among the world's most cited research. Science serves as a forum for discussion of important issues related to the advancement of science by publishing material on which a consensus has been reached as well as including the presentation of minority or conflicting points of view. Accordingly, all articles published in Science—including editorials, news and comment, and book reviews—are signed and reflect the individual views of the authors and not official points of view adopted by AAAS or the institutions with which the authors are affiliated. Science seeks to publish those papers that are most influential in their fields or across fields and that will significantly advance scientific understanding. Selected papers should present novel and broadly important data, syntheses, or concepts. They should merit recognition by the wider scientific community and general public provided by publication in Science, beyond that provided by specialty journals. Science welcomes submissions from all fields of science and from any source. The editors are committed to the prompt evaluation and publication of submitted papers while upholding high standards that support reproducibility of published research. Science is published weekly; selected papers are published online ahead of print.
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