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A millennial‐scale chronicle of evolutionary responses to cultural eutrophication in Daphnia
Authors:Priyanka Roy Chowdhury  Billy W Culver  John K Colbourne  Lawrence J Weider  Punidan D Jeyasingh
Institution:1. Oklahoma State University, Department of Zoology, , Stillwater, OK, 74078 USA;2. University of Oklahoma, Biological Station, , Kingston, OK, 73439 USA;3. University of Oklahoma, Department of Biology, , Norman, OK, 73071 USA;4. University of Birmingham, School of Biosciences, , Birmingham, B15 2TT UK
Abstract:For an accurate assessment of the anthropogenic impacts on evolutionary change in natural populations, we need long‐term environmental, genetic and phenotypic data that predate human disturbances. Analysis of c. 1600 years of history chronicled in the sediments of South Center Lake, Minnesota, USA, revealed major environmental changes beginning c. 120 years ago coinciding with the initiation of industrialised agriculture in the catchment area. Population genetic structure, analysed using DNA from dormant eggs of the keystone aquatic herbivore, Daphnia pulicaria, suggested no change for c. 1500 years prior to striking shifts associated with anthropogenic environmental alterations. Furthermore, phenotypic assays on the oldest resurrected metazoan genotypes (potentially as old as c. 700 years) indicate significant shifts in phosphorus utilisation rates compared to younger genotypes. Younger genotypes show steeper reaction norms with high growth under high phosphorus (P), and low growth under low P, while ‘ancient’ genotypes show flat reaction norms, yet higher growth efficiency under low P. Using this resurrection ecology approach, environmental, genetic and phenotypic data spanning pre‐ and post‐industrialised agricultural eras clearly reveal the evolutionary consequences of anthropogenic environmental change.
Keywords:Environmental change  nutritional physiology  phosphorus  population genetic structure  resurrection ecology
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