Testing how developmental pathways can predict evolutionary adaptation to climate change: an Eco-Devo approach.

Lead Research Organisation: University of Liverpool
Department Name: Evolution, Ecology and Behaviour

Abstract

The world's climate is changing at an unprecedented rate, with dire consequences for biodiversity and ecosystems on which we depend for our survival. To have a chance at managing this transition, we urgently need to identify which species are at risk, and what determines their fate. One key route to resilience is to evolve rapidly enough to keep up with climate change. Unfortunately, the factors that govern limits to and potential for rapid adaptation are poorly understood, and consequently we lack actionable tools that allow us to predict which species can adapt, and where they are vulnerable.

Plasticity is the ability of individuals to exploit predictive environmental cues in order to optimally match morphology, behaviour, and life cycle events to current or future conditions, for instance between seasons. It is accomplished via developmental cascades that translate cues into coherent trait changes, via sensing mechanisms, hormonal signalling pathways, genetic regulators, and ultimately downstream effector genes.

The growing concern is that climate change is making cues less reliable, as well as changing the optimal balance between traits. Under climate change, previously adaptive existing plastic responses are now leading to mismatches between the environment and expressed traits, and unless populations can rapidly evolve new responses, they may face extinction. I have already demonstrated that capacity to evolve is absent in some populations.

Progress to understand limits to rapid adaptation, and in particular the role of plasticity, has been hampered by fragmentation across disciplines. While mechanistic biology has made great strides in disentangling the gene networks and developmental pathways by which the genome makes a multicellular organism, the role of the environment has typically been ignored as noise. Worse, most studies have been carried out in artificial lab environments, far from the complexities of the real world where plastic responses evolve and where they could potentially aid climate resilience.

On the other hand, predictive models of climate change resilience which guide species vulnerability assessments suffer from limited explanatory power as they ignore important biological mechanisms such as phenotypic plasticity, adaptation, and genetics. Rapid adaptation is particularly poorly integrated into these resilience models, due to lack of high-quality empirical data and analytical methods to integrate different types of data.

I have pioneered integrative approaches that bring together developmental, evolutionary, and ecological analytical methods, and have set up tropical butterflies as a powerful model to implement this agenda. Excitingly, new analytical methods in DNA sequencing, genetics, and statistics now hold the promise to connect previously disparate fields.

My multidisciplinary research places me in a unique position to exploit these new technological developments, and realise adaptive capacity as a common currency between mechanistic and conservation biology. Specifically, is genetic variation at key regulatory hubs of developmental pathways that regulate trait expression. Importantly, developing this common currency will enable new tools to predict evolutionary responses to climate change from field-collected DNA samples and climate data.

A FLF would provide me with the opportunity to deliver on this transformative research agenda, and establish me as a leader in the field of Eco-Devo and climate change biology.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description University of Buea 
Organisation University of Buea
Country Cameroon 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Co-supervision of student projects at University of Buea; organisation of workshop at University of Buea.
Collaborator Contribution Support for fieldwork in Cameroon.
Impact None yet.
Start Year 2023
 
Description University of Glasgow 
Organisation University of Glasgow
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Our team provides specimens, data, and analyses.
Collaborator Contribution Dr. Oskar Brattstrom (University of Glasgow) is a world-leading expert in ecology and evolution of African Bicyclus butterflies. Our research in the FLF uses these butterflies as a model system. Dr. Brattstrom is involved in training of our team in Bicyclus ecology, and in data interpretation and manuscript preparation.
Impact None yet.
Start Year 2022
 
Description ESEB 2022 presentation VO 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact PI presented ongoing research at the European Society for Evolutionary Biology's main conference ESEB, held in Prague in August 2022. The audience consisted of evolutionary biologists of all career levels from around the world.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.eseb2022.cz/en/event-programme-list
 
Description Lepinar invited seminar 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact PI was invited to present ongoing work at 'Lepinar', an international, online seminar series dedicated to research on ecology and evolution of butterflies, organised by researchers at the University of Cambridge, UK.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.heliconius.org/lockdown-seminars/