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Abstract
Adaptive evolution and phenotypic plasticity will fuel resilience in the geologically unprecedented warming and acidification of the earth’s oceans, however, we have much to learn about the interactions and costs of these mechanisms of resilience. Here, using 20 generations of experimental evolution followed by three generations of reciprocal transplants, we investigated the relationship between adaptation and plasticity in the marine copepod, Acartia tonsa, in future global change conditions (high temperature and high CO2). We found parallel adaptation to global change conditions in genes related to stress response, gene expression regulation, actin regulation, developmental processes, and energy production. However, reciprocal transplantation showed that adaptation resulted in a loss of transcriptional plasticity, reduced fecundity, and reduced population growth when global change-adapted animals were returned to ambient conditions or reared in low food conditions. However, after three successive transplant generations, global change-adapted animals were able to match the ambient-adaptive transcriptional profile. Concurrent changes in allele frequencies and erosion of nucleotide diversity suggest that this recovery occurred via adaptation back to ancestral conditions. These results demonstrate that while plasticity facilitated initial survival in global change conditions, it eroded after 20 generations as populations adapted, limiting resilience to new stressors and previously benign environments.
Rapid adaptation will facilitate species resilience under global climate change, but its effects on plasticity are less commonly investigated. This study shows that 20 generations of experimental adaptation in a marine copepod drives a rapid loss of plasticity that carries costs and might have impacts on future resilience to environmental change.
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1 University of Vermont, Department of Biology, Burlington, USA (GRID:grid.59062.38) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 7689); GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, Marine Evolutionary Ecology, Kiel, Germany (GRID:grid.15649.3f) (ISNI:0000 0000 9056 9663)
2 University of Connecticut, Department of Marine Sciences, Groton, USA (GRID:grid.63054.34) (ISNI:0000 0001 0860 4915); University of Colorado Denver, Department of Integrative Biology, Denver, USA (GRID:grid.241116.1) (ISNI:0000000107903411)
3 University of Connecticut, Department of Marine Sciences, Groton, USA (GRID:grid.63054.34) (ISNI:0000 0001 0860 4915)
4 University of Connecticut, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Groton, USA (GRID:grid.63054.34) (ISNI:0000 0001 0860 4915)
5 University of Vermont, Department of Biology, Burlington, USA (GRID:grid.59062.38) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 7689)