Extinctions in the marine plankton preceded by stabilizing selection

Unless they adapt, populations facing persistent stress are threatened by extinction. Theoretically, populations facing stress can react by either disruption (increasing trait variation and potentially generating new traits) or stabilization (decreasing trait variation). In the short term, stabiliza...

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Main Authors: Weinkauf, Manuel, Bonitz, Fabian G. W., Martini, Rossana, Kucera, Michal
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://archive-ouverte.unige.ch/unige:138814
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spelling ftunivgeneve:oai:unige.ch:aou:unige:138814 2023-10-01T03:59:00+02:00 Extinctions in the marine plankton preceded by stabilizing selection Weinkauf, Manuel Bonitz, Fabian G. W. Martini, Rossana Kucera, Michal 2019 https://archive-ouverte.unige.ch/unige:138814 eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/10.1101/531947 https://archive-ouverte.unige.ch/unige:138814 unige:138814 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/550 Planktonic Foraminifera Environmental stress Ecology Evolution Adaptation Extinction Red Sea info:eu-repo/semantics/preprint Text Preprint 2019 ftunivgeneve https://doi.org/10.1101/531947 2023-09-07T07:58:05Z Unless they adapt, populations facing persistent stress are threatened by extinction. Theoretically, populations facing stress can react by either disruption (increasing trait variation and potentially generating new traits) or stabilization (decreasing trait variation). In the short term, stabilization is more economical, because it quickly transfers a large part of the population closer to a new ecological optimum. However, canalization is deleterious in the face of persistently increasing stress, because it reduces variability and thus decreases the ability to react to further changes. Understanding how natural populations react to intensifying stress reaching terminal levels is key to assessing their resilience to environmental change such as that caused by global warming. Because extinctions are hard to predict, observational data on the adaptation of populations facing extinction are rare. Here, we make use of the glacial salinity rise in the Red Sea as a natural experiment allowing us to analyse the reaction of planktonic Foraminifera to stress escalation in the geological past. We analyse morphological trait state and variation in two species across a salinity rise leading to their local extinction. One species reacted by stabilization in shape and size, detectable several thousand years prior to extinction. The second species reacted by trait divergence, but each of the two divergent populations remained stable or reacted by further stabilization. These observations indicate that the default reaction of the studied Foraminifera is canalization, and that stress escalation did not lead to the emergence of adapted forms. An inherent inability to breach the global adaptive threshold would explain why communities of Foraminifera and other marine protists reacted to Quaternary climate change by tracking their zonally shifting environments. It also means that populations of marine plankton species adapted to response by migration will be at risk of extinction when exposed to stress outside of the adaptive ... Report Planktonic foraminifera Université de Genève: Archive ouverte UNIGE
institution Open Polar
collection Université de Genève: Archive ouverte UNIGE
op_collection_id ftunivgeneve
language English
topic info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/550
Planktonic Foraminifera
Environmental stress
Ecology
Evolution
Adaptation
Extinction
Red Sea
spellingShingle info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/550
Planktonic Foraminifera
Environmental stress
Ecology
Evolution
Adaptation
Extinction
Red Sea
Weinkauf, Manuel
Bonitz, Fabian G. W.
Martini, Rossana
Kucera, Michal
Extinctions in the marine plankton preceded by stabilizing selection
topic_facet info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/550
Planktonic Foraminifera
Environmental stress
Ecology
Evolution
Adaptation
Extinction
Red Sea
description Unless they adapt, populations facing persistent stress are threatened by extinction. Theoretically, populations facing stress can react by either disruption (increasing trait variation and potentially generating new traits) or stabilization (decreasing trait variation). In the short term, stabilization is more economical, because it quickly transfers a large part of the population closer to a new ecological optimum. However, canalization is deleterious in the face of persistently increasing stress, because it reduces variability and thus decreases the ability to react to further changes. Understanding how natural populations react to intensifying stress reaching terminal levels is key to assessing their resilience to environmental change such as that caused by global warming. Because extinctions are hard to predict, observational data on the adaptation of populations facing extinction are rare. Here, we make use of the glacial salinity rise in the Red Sea as a natural experiment allowing us to analyse the reaction of planktonic Foraminifera to stress escalation in the geological past. We analyse morphological trait state and variation in two species across a salinity rise leading to their local extinction. One species reacted by stabilization in shape and size, detectable several thousand years prior to extinction. The second species reacted by trait divergence, but each of the two divergent populations remained stable or reacted by further stabilization. These observations indicate that the default reaction of the studied Foraminifera is canalization, and that stress escalation did not lead to the emergence of adapted forms. An inherent inability to breach the global adaptive threshold would explain why communities of Foraminifera and other marine protists reacted to Quaternary climate change by tracking their zonally shifting environments. It also means that populations of marine plankton species adapted to response by migration will be at risk of extinction when exposed to stress outside of the adaptive ...
format Report
author Weinkauf, Manuel
Bonitz, Fabian G. W.
Martini, Rossana
Kucera, Michal
author_facet Weinkauf, Manuel
Bonitz, Fabian G. W.
Martini, Rossana
Kucera, Michal
author_sort Weinkauf, Manuel
title Extinctions in the marine plankton preceded by stabilizing selection
title_short Extinctions in the marine plankton preceded by stabilizing selection
title_full Extinctions in the marine plankton preceded by stabilizing selection
title_fullStr Extinctions in the marine plankton preceded by stabilizing selection
title_full_unstemmed Extinctions in the marine plankton preceded by stabilizing selection
title_sort extinctions in the marine plankton preceded by stabilizing selection
publishDate 2019
url https://archive-ouverte.unige.ch/unige:138814
genre Planktonic foraminifera
genre_facet Planktonic foraminifera
op_relation info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/10.1101/531947
https://archive-ouverte.unige.ch/unige:138814
unige:138814
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1101/531947
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