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Evolutionary mechanisms underpinning fitness response to multiple stressors in Daphnia

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posted on 2024-04-26, 15:26 authored by Maria Cuenca‐Cambronero, Jelena H Pantel, Hollie Marshall, Tien TT Nguyen, Henar Tomero‐Sanz, Luisa Orsini

Multiple stressors linked to anthropogenic activities can influence how organisms adapt and evolve. So far, a consensus on how multiple stressors drive adaptive trajectories in natural populations has not been reached. Some meta‐analysis reports show predominance of additive effects of stressors on ecological endpoints (e.g., fecundity, mortality), whereas others show synergistic effects more frequently. Moreover, it is unclear what mechanisms of adaptation underpin responses to complex environments. Here, we use populations of Daphnia magna resurrected from different times in the past to investigate mechanisms of adaptation to multiple stressors and to understand how historical exposure to environmental stress shapes adaptive responses of modern populations. Using common garden experiments on resurrected modern and historical populations, we investigate (1) whether exposure to one stress results in higher tolerance to a second stressor; (2) the mechanisms of adaptation underpinning long‐term evolution to multistress (genetic evolution, plasticity, evolution of plasticity); and (3) the interaction effects of multiple stressors on fitness (synergism, antagonism, additivity). We measure the combined impact of different levels of resource availability (algae) and biocides on fitness‐linked life‐history traits and interpret these results in light of historical environmental exposures. We show that exposure to one stressor can alter tolerance to second stressors and that the interaction effect depends on the severity of either stressor. We also show that mechanisms of adaptation underpinning phenotypic evolution significantly differ in single‐stress and multistress scenarios. These adaptive responses are driven largely by synergistic effects on fecundity and size at maturity, and additive effects on age at maturity. Exposure to multiple stressors shifts the trade‐offs among fitness‐linked life‐history traits, with a stronger effect on Daphnia populations when low‐resource availability and high biocide levels are experienced. Our study indicates that mitigation interventions based on single‐stress analysis may not capture realistic threats.

Funding

Cracking the Code of Adaptive Evolution (deCODE)

Natural Environment Research Council

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History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences/Genetics & Genome Biology

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Evolutionary Applications

Volume

14

Issue

10

Pagination

2457 - 2469

Publisher

Wiley

issn

1752-4571

eissn

1752-4571

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2024-04-26

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Hollie Marshall

Deposit date

2024-04-25

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