Human influences on rates of phenotypic change in wild animal populations
McGill University · University of Maine
Abstract
Human activities can expose populations to dramatic environmental perturbations, which may then precipitate adaptive phenotypic change. We ask whether or not phenotypic changes associated with human-disturbed (anthropogenic) contexts are greater than those associated with more 'natural' contexts. Our meta-analysis is based on more than 3000 rates of phenotypic change in 68 'systems', each representing a given species in a particular geographical area. We find that rates of phenotypic change are greater in anthropogenic contexts than in natural contexts. This difference may be influenced by phenotypic plasticity - because it was evident for studies of wild-caught individuals (which integrate both genetic and…
Citation impact
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Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Phenotypic plasticity
- Biology
- Phenotype
- Phenotypic trait
- Environmental change
- Disturbance (geology)
- Evolutionary biology
- Ecology
- Life in Land