Data from: Resurrected “ancient” Daphnia genotypes show reduced thermal stress tolerance compared to modern descendants
Understanding how populations adapt to rising temperatures has been a challenge in ecology. Research often evaluates multiple populations to test whether local adaptation to temperature regimes is occurring. Space-for-time substitutions are common, as temporal constraints limit our ability to observ...
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding how populations adapt to rising temperatures has been a
challenge in ecology. Research often evaluates multiple populations to
test whether local adaptation to temperature regimes is occurring.
Space-for-time substitutions are common, as temporal constraints limit our
ability to observe evolutionary responses. We employed a resurrection
ecology approach to understand how thermal tolerance has changed in a
Daphnia pulicaria population over time. Temperatures experienced by the
oldest genotypes were considerably lower than the youngest. We
hypothesized clones were adapted to the thermal regimes of their
respective time periods. We performed two thermal shock experiments that
varied in length of heat exposure. Overall trends revealed that younger
genotypes exhibited higher thermal tolerance than older genotypes; heat
shock protein (hsp70) expression increased with temperature and varied
among genotypes, but not across time periods. Our results indicate
temperature may have been a selective factor on this population, although
the observed responses may be a function of multifarious selection. Prior
work found striking changes in population genetic structure, and in other
traits that were strongly correlated with anthropogenic changes.
Resurrection ecology approaches should help our understanding of
interactive effects of anthropogenic alterations to temperature and other
stressors on the evolutionary fate of natural populations. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.f30r1 |