1. Reversed evolution of grazer resistance to cyanobacteria
- Author
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Markus Möst, Jana Isanta-Navarro, Dominik Martin-Creuzburg, Jannik Beninde, Nelson G. Hairston, Dietmar Straile, and Axel Meyer
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Cyanobacteria ,Genotype ,Science ,Biodiversity ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Evolutionary ecology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Daphnia ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,Biological Coevolution ,Evolutionary ecology, Experimental evolution, Freshwater ecology, Limnology ,Nutrient ,Quantitative Trait, Heritable ,ddc:570 ,Limnology ,Animals ,Humans ,Selection, Genetic ,Multidisciplinary ,Extinction ,biology ,Resistance (ecology) ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Water Pollution ,General Chemistry ,Eutrophication ,biology.organism_classification ,Europe ,Lakes ,Phenotype ,Experimental evolution ,Nutrient pollution ,Freshwater ecology ,Genetic Fitness - Abstract
Exploring the capability of organisms to cope with human-caused environmental change is crucial for assessing the risk of extinction and biodiversity loss. We study the consequences of changing nutrient pollution for the freshwater keystone grazer, Daphnia, in a large lake with a well-documented history of eutrophication and oligotrophication. Experiments using decades-old genotypes resurrected from the sediment egg bank revealed that nutrient enrichment in the middle of the 20th century, resulting in the proliferation of harmful cyanobacteria, led to the rapid evolution of grazer resistance to cyanobacteria. We show here that the subsequent reduction in nutrient input, accompanied by a decrease in cyanobacteria, resulted in the re-emergence of highly susceptible Daphnia genotypes. Expression and subsequent loss of grazer resistance occurred at high evolutionary rates, suggesting opposing selection and that maintaining resistance was costly. We provide a rare example of reversed evolution of a fitness-relevant trait in response to relaxed selection., Anthropogenic changes, such as eutrophication from lake pollution, can lead to rapid evolution. Comparing Daphnia resurrected from generations adapted to historical pollution to contemporary, post-cleanup populations finds that Daphnia rapidly reversed their evolved resistance to harmful cyanobacteria.
- Published
- 2021