Eradication efforts catalyze rapid evolution in an invasive predatory fish
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Zarri, Liam J.; Kraft, Clifford E.; Mcintyre, Peter B.; Baetscher, Diana S.; Jirka, Kurt J.; Randall, Eileen A.; Quay, Benjamin Marcy -; St John, Carl A.; Sethi, Suresh A.; Airey, Montana E.; Detmer, Thomas M.; Flecker, Alexander S.; Therkildsen, Nina O.
署名单位:
Cornell University; Cornell University; National Oceanic Atmospheric Admin (NOAA) - USA; United States Department of the Interior; United States Geological Survey; City University of New York (CUNY) System; Brooklyn College (CUNY)
刊物名称:
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ISSN/ISSBN:
0027-12905
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.2424067122
发表日期:
2025-06-17
关键词:
smallmouth bass
micropterus-dolomieu
population-genetics
r package
resistance
mortality
removal
HISTORY
CONSEQUENCES
selection
摘要:
Species invasions spur costly and labor-intensive control efforts, yet even local eradication is seldom achieved. When control measures are initially effective, they may drive evolutionary adaptation that prevents full eradication, as has been documented for some chemical and biocontrol approaches. Although the intensity, directionality, and persistence of selection required to increase the frequency of resistant genotypes in complex natural ecosystems remains an open question, theory predicts that high mortality can cause life-history evolution even in the absence of a strong selective agent. Here, we use annually collected ecological and genetic data to show that rapid evolution of introduced smallmouth bass has undermined a 20-y manual suppression effort in a mid-sized lake. Despite nearly doubling annual mortality, our intensive control program produced a larger bass population dominated by young and early-maturing fish. These shifts were accompanied by large allele frequency changes in three genomic regions associated with earlier maturation and increased somatic growth. Our findings bear out the theoretical prediction that high mortality can drive evolutionary adaptation in target species. Controlling species invasions are worldwide practices that typically remove a substantial proportion of a population during each of many successive generations, hence life history adaptation may be commonplace. Such evolutionary responses could be salient in explaining the widespread failure of invasion control efforts. Genetic and phenotypic monitoring to detect cryptic adaptation and preemptive design of invader eradication programs to deliberately disrupt directional selection for resistance could improve invasion control outcomes.