Abstract
Urbanization causes both changes in community composition and evolutionary responses, but most studies focus on these responses in isolation. We performed an integrated analysis assessing the relative contribution of intra- and interspecific trait turnover to the observed change in zooplankton community body size in 83 cladoceran communities along urbanization gradients quantified at seven spatial scales (50–3200 m radii). We also performed a quantitative genetic analysis on 12
Daphnia magna
populations along the same urbanization gradient. Body size in zooplankton communities generally declined with increasing urbanization, but the opposite was observed for communities dominated by large species. The contribution of intraspecific trait variation to community body size turnover with urbanization strongly varied with the spatial scale considered, and was highest for communities dominated by large cladoceran species and at intermediate spatial scales. Genotypic size at maturity was smaller for urban than for rural
D. magna
populations and for animals cultured at 24°C compared with 20°C. While local genetic adaptation likely contributed to the persistence of
D. magna
in the urban heat islands, buffering for the phenotypic shift to larger body sizes with increasing urbanization, community body size turnover was mainly driven by non-genetic intraspecific trait change.
This article is part of the themed issue ‘Human influences on evolution, and the ecological and societal consequences’.
Funder
Science Without Borders- CNPq
Institute for the Promotion of Innovation through Science and Technology in Flanders
KU Leuven Research Council excellence financing
Belspo
Fund for Scientific Research - Flanders
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Cited by
67 articles.
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