» Articles » PMID: 11838765

The Population Ecology of Contemporary Adaptations: What Empirical Studies Reveal About the Conditions That Promote Adaptive Evolution

Overview
Journal Genetica
Specialties Cell Biology
Genetics
Date 2002 Feb 13
PMID 11838765
Citations 170
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Under what conditions might organisms be capable of rapid adaptive evolution? We reviewed published studies documenting contemporary adaptations in natural populations and looked for general patterns in the population ecological causes. We found that studies of contemporary adaptation fall into two general settings: (1) colonization of new environments that established newly adapted populations, and (2) local adaptations within the context of a heterogeneous environments and metapopulation structure. Local ecological processes associated with colonizations and introductions included exposure to: (1) a novel host or food resource; (2) a new biophysical environment; (3) a new predator community; and (4) a new coexisting competitor. The new environments that were colonized often had depauperate communities, sometimes because of anthropogenic disturbance. Local adaptation in heterogeneous environments was also often associated with recent anthropogenic changes, such as insecticide and herbicide resistance, or industrial melanism. A common feature of many examples is the combination of directional selection with at least a short-term opportunity for population growth. We suggest that such opportunities for population growth may be a key factor that promotes rapid evolution, since directional selection might otherwise be expected to cause population decline and create the potential for local extinction, which is an ever-present alternative to local adaptation. We also address the large discrepancy between the rate of evolution observed in contemporary studies and the apparent rate of evolution seen in the fossil record.

Citing Articles

An experimental test of eco-evolutionary dynamics on rocky shores.

Longman E, Sanford E Ecology. 2025; 106(1):e4505.

PMID: 39814598 PMC: 11735340. DOI: 10.1002/ecy.4505.


Genetic and Phenotypic Divergence in a Dung Beetle 50 Years After Its Introduction to Australia.

Rapalai B, Simmons L, Evans T, Kennington W Ecol Evol. 2024; 14(11):e70536.

PMID: 39524314 PMC: 11550911. DOI: 10.1002/ece3.70536.


Evolutionary rescue in resistance to pesticides.

Madgwick P, Tunstall T, Kanitz R Proc Biol Sci. 2024; 291(2025):20240805.

PMID: 38917864 PMC: 11285845. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2024.0805.


Is competitive ability the key adaptation to benign environments? Revisiting experiments on closely related species of tidal plants.

Martin P, Ghalambor C Biol Lett. 2024; 20(5):20230509.

PMID: 38746982 PMC: 11285840. DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2023.0509.


A lack of genetic diversity and minimal adaptive evolutionary divergence in introduced Mysis shrimp after 50 years.

Cheek R, McLaughlin J, Gamboa M, Marshall C, Johnson B, Silver D Evol Appl. 2024; 17(1):e13637.

PMID: 38283609 PMC: 10818135. DOI: 10.1111/eva.13637.