Phenotypic but no genetic adaptation in zooplankton 24 years after an abrupt +10°C climate change

Author:

Pais-Costa Antónia Juliana12ORCID,Lievens Eva J. P.13ORCID,Redón Stella14ORCID,Sánchez Marta I.45,Jabbour-Zahab Roula1,Joncour Pauline6,Van Hoa Nguyen7,Van Stappen Gilbert8,Lenormand Thomas1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CEFE, CNRS, Univ Montpellier Univ Paul Valéry Montpellier 3, EPHE, IRD Montpellier 34293 France

2. Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre (MARE), Faculty of Sciences and Technology University of Coimbra Coimbra 3004-517 Portugal

3. Aquatic Ecology and Evolution, Department of Biology University of Konstanz Konstanz 78464 Germany

4. Department of Wetland Ecology Estación Biológica de Doñana-CSIC Sevilla 41092 Spain

5. Departamento de Biología Vegetal y Ecología, Facultad de Biología Universidad de Sevilla Sevilla 41012 Spain

6. CNRS, Université de Rennes 1, ECOBIO (écosystème, biodiversité, évolution) - UMR 6553 Rennes 35042 France

7. Department of Coastal Aquaculture College of Aquaculture and Fisheries Can Tho University Can Tho Vietnam

8. Laboratory of Aquaculture and Artemia Reference Center Ghent University Gent B-9000 Belgium

Abstract

Abstract The climate is currently warming fast, threatening biodiversity all over the globe. Populations often adapt rapidly to environmental change, but for climate warming very little evidence is available. Here, we investigate the pattern of adaptation to an extreme +10°C climate change in the wild, following the introduction of brine shrimp Artemia franciscana from San Francisco Bay, USA, to Vinh Chau saltern in Vietnam. We use a resurrection ecology approach, hatching diapause eggs from the ancestral population and the introduced population after 13 and 24 years (∼54 and ∼100 generations, respectively). In a series of coordinated experiments, we determined whether the introduced Artemia show increased tolerance to higher temperatures, and the extent to which genetic adaptation, developmental plasticity, transgenerational effects, and local microbiome differences contributed to this tolerance. We find that introduced brine shrimp do show increased phenotypic tolerance to warming. Yet strikingly, these changes do not have a detectable additive genetic component, are not caused by mitochondrial genetic variation, and do not seem to be caused by epigenetic marks set by adult parents exposed to warming. Further, we do not find any developmental plasticity that would help cope with warming, nor any protective effect of heat-tolerant local microbiota. The evolved thermal tolerance might therefore be entirely due to transgenerational (great)grandparental effects, possibly epigenetic marks set by parents who were exposed to high temperatures as juveniles. This study is a striking example of “missing heritability,” where a large adaptive phenotypic change is not accompanied by additive genetic effects.

Funder

MUSE Kim Sea and Coast, CNRS and Fundación BBVA

FCT Portugal

PhD grant of A. J. Pais-Costa

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference44 articles.

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4. Thermal resistance, developmental rate and heat shock proteins in Artemia franciscana, from San Francisco Bay and southern Vietnam;Clegg;J. Exp. Mar. Bio. Ecol.,2000

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