Aguirre-Liguori et al., 2019
miércoles, 25 de septiembre de 2019
Climate change is predicted to disrupt patterns of local adaptation in wild and cultivated maize
Aguirre-Liguori et al., 2019
Aguirre-Liguori et al., 2019
Climate change is one of the most important threats to biodiversity and
crop sustainability. The impact of climate change is often evaluated on
the basis of expected changes in species' geographical distributions.
Genomic diversity, local adaptation, and migration are seldom integrated
into future species projections. Here, we examine how climate change
will impact populations of two wild relatives of maize, the teosintes Zea mays ssp. mexicana and Z. mays ssp. parviglumis.
Despite high levels of genetic diversity within populations and
widespread future habitat suitability, we predict that climate change
will alter patterns of local adaptation and decrease migration
probabilities in more than two-thirds of present-day teosinte
populations. These alterations are geographically heterogeneous and
suggest that the possible impacts of climate change will vary
considerably among populations. The population-specific effects of
climate change are also evident in maize landraces, suggesting that
climate change may result in maize landraces becoming maladapted to the
climates in which they are currently cultivated. The predicted
alterations to habitat distribution, migration potential, and patterns
of local adaptation in wild and cultivated maize raise a red flag for
the future of populations. The heterogeneous nature of predicted
populations’ responses underscores that the selective impact of climate
change may vary among populations and that this is affected by different
processes, including past adaptation.
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