Fitness surfaces and local thermal adaptation in Drosophila along a latitudinal gradient.

Ecol Lett

Departamento de Ecología, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Center of Applied Ecology and Sustainability (CAPES), Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile.

Published: April 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Local adaptation helps explain where species are found, but the effects of geographic temperature variations on their fitness are less understood.
  • We studied Drosophila populations over 2500 km, finding that their heat tolerance and survival rates differ based on local temperatures.
  • Our simulations showed that while populations are adapted to their environments, warmer regions could lead to higher mortality and lower recruitment, indicating a balance needed for optimal fitness.

Article Abstract

Local adaptation is commonly cited to explain species distribution, but how fitness varies along continuous geographical gradients is not well understood. Here, we combine thermal biology and life-history theory to demonstrate that Drosophila populations along a 2500 km latitudinal cline are adapted to local conditions. We measured how heat tolerance and viability rate across eight populations varied with temperature in the laboratory and then simulated their expected cumulative Darwinian fitness employing high-resolution temperature data from their eight collection sites. Simulations indicate a trade-off between annual survival and cumulative viability, as both mortality and the recruitment of new flies are predicted to increase in warmer regions. Importantly, populations are locally adapted and exhibit the optimal combination of both traits to maximize fitness where they live. In conclusion, our method is able to reconstruct fitness surfaces employing empirical life-history estimates and reconstructs peaks representing locally adapted populations, allowing us to study geographic adaptation in silico.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ele.14405DOI Listing

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