Hua_2015_Evol.Appl_8_586

Reference

Title : The contribution of phenotypic plasticity to the evolution of insecticide tolerance in amphibian populations - Hua_2015_Evol.Appl_8_586
Author(s) : Hua J , Jones DK , Mattes BM , Cothran RD , Relyea RA , Hoverman JT
Ref : Evol Appl , 8 :586 , 2015
Abstract :

Understanding population responses to rapid environmental changes caused by anthropogenic activities, such as pesticides, is a research frontier. Genetic assimilation (GA), a process initiated by phenotypic plasticity, is one mechanism potentially influencing evolutionary responses to novel environments. While theoretical and laboratory research suggests that GA has the potential to influence evolutionary trajectories, few studies have assessed its role in the evolution of wild populations experiencing novel environments. Using the insecticide, carbaryl, and 15 wood frog populations distributed across an agricultural gradient, we tested whether GA contributed to the evolution of pesticide tolerance. First, we investigated the evidence for evolved tolerance to carbaryl and discovered that population-level patterns of tolerance were consistent with evolutionary responses to pesticides; wood frog populations living closer to agriculture were more tolerant than populations living far from agriculture. Next, we tested the potential role of GA in the evolution of pesticide tolerance by assessing whether patterns of tolerance were consistent with theoretical predictions. We found that populations close to agriculture displayed constitutive tolerance to carbaryl whereas populations far from agriculture had low naive tolerance but high magnitudes of induced tolerance. These results suggest GA could play a role in evolutionary responses to novel environments in nature.

PubMedSearch : Hua_2015_Evol.Appl_8_586
PubMedID: 26136824

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Citations formats

Hua J, Jones DK, Mattes BM, Cothran RD, Relyea RA, Hoverman JT (2015)
The contribution of phenotypic plasticity to the evolution of insecticide tolerance in amphibian populations
Evol Appl 8 :586

Hua J, Jones DK, Mattes BM, Cothran RD, Relyea RA, Hoverman JT (2015)
Evol Appl 8 :586