Understanding Maladaptation by Uniting Ecological and Evolutionary Perspectives.

Clicks: 151
ID: 40782
2019
Article Quality & Performance Metrics
Overall Quality Improving Quality
0.0 /100
Combines engagement data with AI-assessed academic quality
AI Quality Assessment
Not analyzed
Abstract
Evolutionary biologists have long trained their sights on adaptation, focusing on the power of natural selection to produce relative fitness advantages while often ignoring changes in absolute fitness. Ecologists generally have taken a different tack, focusing on changes in abundance and ranges that reflect absolute fitness while often ignoring relative fitness. Uniting these perspectives, we articulate various causes of relative and absolute maladaptation and review numerous examples of their occurrence. This review indicates that maladaptation is reasonably common from both perspectives, yet often in contrasting ways. That is, maladaptation can appear strong from a relative fitness perspective, yet populations can be growing in abundance. Conversely, resident individuals can appear locally adapted (relative to nonresident individuals) yet be declining in abundance. Understanding and interpreting these disconnects between relative and absolute maladaptation, as well as the cases of agreement, is increasingly critical in the face of accelerating human-mediated environmental change. We therefore present a framework for studying maladaptation, focusing in particular on the relationship between absolute and relative fitness, thereby drawing together evolutionary and ecological perspectives. The unification of these ecological and evolutionary perspectives has the potential to bring together previously disjunct research areas while addressing key conceptual issues and specific practical problems.
Reference Key
brady2019understandingthe Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Brady, Steven P;Bolnick, Daniel I;Barrett, Rowan D H;Chapman, Lauren;Crispo, Erika;Derry, Alison M;Eckert, Christopher G;Fraser, Dylan J;Fussmann, Gregor F;Gonzalez, Andrew;Guichard, Frederic;Lamy, Thomas;Lane, Jeffrey;McAdam, Andrew G;Newman, Amy E M;Paccard, Antoine;Robertson, Bruce;Rolshausen, Gregor;Schulte, Patricia M;Simons, Andrew M;Vellend, Mark;Hendry, Andrew;
Journal the american naturalist
Year 2019
DOI
10.1086/705020
URL
Keywords Keywords not found

Citations

No citations found. To add a citation, contact the admin at info@scimatic.org

No comments yet. Be the first to comment on this article.