Evolutionary rescue of freshwater copepods during historical lake acidification

Salamon, Mathilde; St Martin, Maxime; Barrett, Rowan et Derry, Alison (2026). « Evolutionary rescue of freshwater copepods during historical lake acidification ». Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 293(202526).

Fichier(s) associé(s) à ce document :
[img]
Prévisualisation
PDF
Télécharger (5MB)

Résumé

The persistence of populations facing severe environmental disturbance can be enabled by natural selection on heritable phenotypic variation—a process known as evolutionary rescue. Few studies have documented this process or its long-term consequences in complex natural environments. Here, we used copepod resting eggs of Leptodiaptomus minutus from three time periods of lake ecological history, spanning approximately 200 generations (100 years) in two populations impacted by historical acidification. Whole genome sequencing of the resting eggs revealed significant allele frequency shifts associated with the acidification, followed by pH recovery. We used a resurrection ecology approach to retrace adaptive shifts concomitant with environmental transitions. Copepods from the pre-acidification period showed sensitivity to acidity, while individuals from the acidification period were adapted to acidic pH. This tolerance was subsequently lost during pH recovery, implying an adaptive reversal. Demographic models indicated a decline during the acidification process, followed by population recovery based on historical data, suggesting that selection led to evolutionary rescue. This study fills a critical knowledge gap about the long-term implications of evolutionary rescue in the wild.

Type: Article de revue scientifique
Mots-clés ou Sujets: evolutionary rescue, adaptation, resurrection ecology, genomics, time-series, demography
Unité d'appartenance: Faculté des sciences > Département des sciences biologiques
Déposé par: Alison Margaret Derry
Date de dépôt: 10 févr. 2026 14:08
Dernière modification: 10 févr. 2026 14:08
Adresse URL : https://archipel.uqam.ca/secure/id/eprint/19644

Statistiques

Voir les statistiques sur cinq ans...