articleEcology LettersJul 30, 2009Closed access

Evolutionary rescue can prevent extinction following environmental change

McGill University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

The ubiquity of global change and its impacts on biodiversity poses a clear and urgent challenge for evolutionary biologists. In many cases, environmental change is so widespread and rapid that individuals can neither accommodate to them physiologically nor migrate to a more favourable site. Extinction will ensue unless the population adapts fast enough to counter the rate of decline. According to theory, whether populations can be rescued by evolution depends upon several crucial variables: population size, the supply of genetic variation, and the degree of maladaptation to the new environment. Using techniques in experimental evolution we tested the conditions for evolutionary rescue (ER). Hundreds of yeast…

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614
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Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Extinction (optical mineralogy)
  • Environmental change
  • Maladaptation
  • Population
  • Population size
  • Biology
  • Experimental evolution
  • Ecology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life in Land
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