Experimental migration upward in elevation is associated with strong selection on life history traits

Abstract One of the strongest biological impacts of climate change has been the movement of species poleward and upward in elevation. Yet, what is not clear is the extent to which the spatial distribution of locally adapted lineages and ecologically important traits may also shift with continued cli...

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Main Authors: Megan L. Peterson, Amy L. Angert, Kathleen M. Kay
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-01-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5710
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spelling doaj-7b3d8f121a2e42dd8ca2e1dc7cfa136c2021-04-02T14:05:45ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582020-01-0110261262510.1002/ece3.5710Experimental migration upward in elevation is associated with strong selection on life history traitsMegan L. Peterson0Amy L. Angert1Kathleen M. Kay2Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of California Santa Cruz Santa Cruz CaliforniaDepartment of Botany and Zoology University of British Columbia Vancouver BC CanadaEcology and Evolutionary Biology University of California Santa Cruz Santa Cruz CaliforniaAbstract One of the strongest biological impacts of climate change has been the movement of species poleward and upward in elevation. Yet, what is not clear is the extent to which the spatial distribution of locally adapted lineages and ecologically important traits may also shift with continued climate change. Here, we take advantage of a transplant experiment mimicking up‐slope seed dispersal for a suite of ecologically diverse populations of yellow monkeyflower (Mimulus guttatus sensu lato) into a high‐elevation common garden during an extreme drought period in the Sierra Nevada mountains, California, USA. We use a demographic approach to quantify fitness and test for selection on life history traits in local versus lower‐elevation populations and in normal versus drought years to test the potential for up‐slope migration and phenotypic selection to alter the distribution of key life history traits in montane environments. We find that lower‐elevation populations tend to outperform local populations, confirming the potential for up‐slope migration. Although selection generally favored some local montane traits, including larger flowers and larger stem size at flowering, drought conditions tended to select for earlier flowering typical of lower‐elevation genotypes. Taken together, this suggests that monkeyflower lineages moving upward in elevation could experience selection for novel trait combinations, particularly under warmer and drier conditions that are predicted to occur with continued climate change.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5710climate changeelasticitylife historyMimulus guttatusrange shiftsselection
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Megan L. Peterson
Amy L. Angert
Kathleen M. Kay
spellingShingle Megan L. Peterson
Amy L. Angert
Kathleen M. Kay
Experimental migration upward in elevation is associated with strong selection on life history traits
Ecology and Evolution
climate change
elasticity
life history
Mimulus guttatus
range shifts
selection
author_facet Megan L. Peterson
Amy L. Angert
Kathleen M. Kay
author_sort Megan L. Peterson
title Experimental migration upward in elevation is associated with strong selection on life history traits
title_short Experimental migration upward in elevation is associated with strong selection on life history traits
title_full Experimental migration upward in elevation is associated with strong selection on life history traits
title_fullStr Experimental migration upward in elevation is associated with strong selection on life history traits
title_full_unstemmed Experimental migration upward in elevation is associated with strong selection on life history traits
title_sort experimental migration upward in elevation is associated with strong selection on life history traits
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Abstract One of the strongest biological impacts of climate change has been the movement of species poleward and upward in elevation. Yet, what is not clear is the extent to which the spatial distribution of locally adapted lineages and ecologically important traits may also shift with continued climate change. Here, we take advantage of a transplant experiment mimicking up‐slope seed dispersal for a suite of ecologically diverse populations of yellow monkeyflower (Mimulus guttatus sensu lato) into a high‐elevation common garden during an extreme drought period in the Sierra Nevada mountains, California, USA. We use a demographic approach to quantify fitness and test for selection on life history traits in local versus lower‐elevation populations and in normal versus drought years to test the potential for up‐slope migration and phenotypic selection to alter the distribution of key life history traits in montane environments. We find that lower‐elevation populations tend to outperform local populations, confirming the potential for up‐slope migration. Although selection generally favored some local montane traits, including larger flowers and larger stem size at flowering, drought conditions tended to select for earlier flowering typical of lower‐elevation genotypes. Taken together, this suggests that monkeyflower lineages moving upward in elevation could experience selection for novel trait combinations, particularly under warmer and drier conditions that are predicted to occur with continued climate change.
topic climate change
elasticity
life history
Mimulus guttatus
range shifts
selection
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5710
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