2021
DOI: 10.1111/jeb.13797
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Evolutionary rescue at different rates of environmental change is affected by trade‐offs between short‐term performance and long‐term survival

Abstract: As climate change accelerates and habitats free from anthropogenic impacts diminish, populations are forced to migrate or to adapt quickly. Evolutionary rescue (ER) is a phenomenon, in which a population is able to avoid extinction through adaptation. ER is considered to be more likely at slower rates of environmental change. However, the effects of correlated characters on evolutionary rescue are seldom explored yet correlated characters could play a major role in ER. We tested how evolutionary background in … Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 55 publications
(107 reference statements)
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“…The study of real-time evolution of populations evolving under different realistic ecological scenarios can also provide invaluable insight on the adaptive potential to respond to temperature fluctuations and global warming (Kawecki et al 2012;Karve et al 2015Karve et al , 2016Manenti et al 2015;Bailey and Bataillon 2016;Kellermann and van Heerwaarden 2019;Liukkonen et al 2021). By means of experimental evolution, populations are studied across several generations in very well-defined and reproducible conditions that are often achievable only in the laboratory (e.g., Kawecki et al 2012;Magalhães and Matos 2012).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The study of real-time evolution of populations evolving under different realistic ecological scenarios can also provide invaluable insight on the adaptive potential to respond to temperature fluctuations and global warming (Kawecki et al 2012;Karve et al 2015Karve et al , 2016Manenti et al 2015;Bailey and Bataillon 2016;Kellermann and van Heerwaarden 2019;Liukkonen et al 2021). By means of experimental evolution, populations are studied across several generations in very well-defined and reproducible conditions that are often achievable only in the laboratory (e.g., Kawecki et al 2012;Magalhães and Matos 2012).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2015; Bailey and Bataillon 2016; Kellermann and van Heerwaarden 2019; Liukkonen et al. 2021). By means of experimental evolution, populations are studied across several generations in very well‐defined and reproducible conditions that are often achievable only in the laboratory (e.g., Kawecki et al.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Polygynous populations exhibiting mating harassment might be therefore better equipped to adapt and persist in the face of climate change. Importantly, our model assumes a sudden or rapid environmental change, and evolutionary rescue is more likely under gradual change (Bell & Gonzalez, 2011; Carlson et al ., 2014), although faster recovery might be at the cost of long-term survival (Liukkonen et al ., 2021). Exploring the effects of sexual conflict in gradually changing environments would be an interesting expansion.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the influence of the price-based policy in the free trade port policy on the financial benchmark rate of return of the investment industry, on the one hand, according to the internal value determination theory of the investment industry and the financial benchmark income discount model [27,28], the internal value of the investment industry is the present value of the future financial benchmark income. When the loose price-based policy is adopted, the decline of the financial benchmark rate of return leads to the decline of the discount rate.…”
Section: Eoretical Model Of Investment and Fiscal And Tax Policymentioning
confidence: 99%