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(2007) Potential responses to climate change in organisms with complex life histories: evolution and plasticity in Pacific salmon

Authors
Crozier L.
Source
Blackwell publishing (1)
Type
P - Paper (2851)
Peer Review
1 - High (2301)
Audience
S - Specialist (3514)
Pages
19
Notes

Abstract
Salmon life histories are finely tuned to local environmental conditions, which are intimately linked to climate. We summarize the likely impacts of climate
change on the physical environment of salmon in the Pacific Northwest and discuss the potential evolutionary consequences of these changes, with particular
reference to Columbia River Basin spring/summer Chinook (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and sockeye (Oncorhynchus nerka) salmon. We discuss the possible evolutionary responses in migration and spawning date egg and juvenile
growth and development rates, thermal tolerance, and disease resistance. We know little about ocean migration pathways, so cannot confidently suggest the
potential changes in this life stage. Climate change might produce conflicting selection pressures in different life stages, which will interact with plastic (i.e. nongenetic) changes in various ways. To clarify these interactions, we present a conceptual model of how changing environmental conditions shift phenotypic
optima and, through plastic responses, phenotype distributions, affecting the force of selection. Our predictions are tentative because we lack data on the
strength of selection, heritability, and ecological and genetic linkages among many of the traits discussed here. Despite the challenges involved in experimental
manipulation of species with complex life histories, such research is essential for full appreciation of the biological effects of climate change.

World_link Resources online

Folder Categories
Rivers Fish
 
Tag_blue Keywords
genetic correlation phenological change smolt timing
 
 
 

Entered by: Sonia Khela, 6/2010

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