Inherit the warmer wind: some organisms' genes are changing in step with Earth's climate.While Christina Holzapfel and William Bradshaw William Bradshaw, (February 12, 1830- March 9, 1861) born in Thurles, County Tipperary, he was an Irish recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. were post-doctoral fellows at Harvard University Harvard University, mainly at Cambridge, Mass., including Harvard College, the oldest American college. Harvard College Harvard College, originally for men, was founded in 1636 with a grant from the General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. , they discovered a love for each other--and for bogs. The pair used to spend entire days knee-deep in peat, admiring the soupy soup·y adj. soup·i·er, soup·i·est 1. Having the appearance or consistency of soup. 2. Informal Foggy: soupy weather. 3. Informal Sentimental. , muddy scenery. "It's a peculiarity, I know" says Holzapfel. "But when you see the pitcher plants pitcher plant, any of several insectivorous plants with leaves adapted for trapping insects. Each leaf forms a "pitcher," a somewhat trumpet-shaped enclosure, usually containing a liquid. in bloom, with these exquisite pink blossoms shining out over the generally mucky muck n. 1. A moist sticky mixture, especially of mud and filth. 2. Moist farmyard dung; manure. 3. Dark fertile soil containing decaying vegetable matter. 4. Something filthy or disgusting. mess, it's a stunning thing." Now, 30 years later, Holzapfel and Bradshaw are married and jointly running a lab at the University of Oregon The University of Oregon is a public university located in Eugene, Oregon. The university was founded in 1876, graduating its first class two years later. The University of Oregon is one of 60 members of the Association of American Universities. in Eugene. The couple's attention focuses on one of a bog's typical residents--a tiny mosquito mosquito (məskē`tō), small, long-legged insect of the order Diptera, the true flies. The females of most species have piercing and sucking mouth parts and apparently they must feed at least once upon mammalian blood before their eggs can that makes its home inside carnivorous car·niv·o·rous adj. 1. Of or relating to carnivores. 2. Flesh-eating or predatory: a carnivorous bird. 3. pitcher plants. This pitcher plant mosquito (Wyeomyia smithii) helps itself to insects captured by the plant, digesting parts of the bugs and leaving the rest behind for the plant. Much of the two scientists' work revolves around a phenomenon known as photoperiodicity photoperiodicity the rhythm of certain biological phenomena such as hibernation and reproductive activity which are determined by the regularly recurring changes in light and dark caused by the annual passage of the earth about the sun. , in which the mosquitoes rely on day length to determine when to go dormant in the fall. Variations in this trait are controlled by genes. Five years ago, the two scientists got their first clues that the W. smithii specimens they'd analyzed while at Harvard weren't quite the same as the ones they continue to capture and study today. Other researchers had already observed that global warming global warming, the gradual increase of the temperature of the earth's lower atmosphere as a result of the increase in greenhouse gases since the Industrial Revolution. seemed to be changing the actions of some organisms (SN: 3/8/03,p. 152)--animals from birds to butterflies were migrating out of their long-time habitats, and plants were flowering too early or going dormant too late. Some scientists had batted around the idea that not all these changes were superficial--that instead, populations might be responding to global warming by modifying their genes. Holzapfel and Bradshaw remembered that idea one morning over coffee as they flipped through the decades of data they'd collected on photoperiodicity in W. smithii. "We were totally shocked by what we saw," recalls Holzapfel. Photoperiodic time tables, hardwired in the mosquitoes during thousands of years of evolution, appeared to be gradually changing in many of the populations--a result, the two scientists say, of warmer temperatures in each population's habitat. Holzapfel and Bradshaw's mosquitoes were one of the first organisms in which scientists observed genetic changes that might be attributed to global warming. Other scientists have more recently reported that the genetic makeup of organisms ranging from fruit flies to birds might also be responding to climate trends. Although these adaptations may enable some animals to keep pace with global warming, animals that don't evolve quickly could be at risk. A BUG'S LIFE It makes sense that insects would be among the first animals to show signs of genetic change in response to global warming, says Bradshaw. Many insect species have survived climate swings and other environmental changes that have taken place in the past few hundred thousand years. This suggests that in some bug populations, genomes contain enough variety to adapt to changes. Furthermore, insects are fast and prolific breeders. So, a few individuals with a gene variation that helps them survive an environmental change can quickly spread the novel trait throughout the population. Bradshaw explains that in W. smithii, an appropriate photoperiodicity is pivotal for an individual insect's survival. Go dormant too early in the fall, and the mosquitoes don't have enough energy stored to survive the winter; wait too long to go dormant, and the insects could freeze to death. Since day length is the same in a particular location year after year, but differs from place to place, mosquitoes in individual locales throughout the pitcher plants' range--from north Florida up to Manitoba, and from Nova Scotia Nova Scotia (nō`və skō`shə) [Lat.,=new Scotland], province (2001 pop. 908,007), 21,425 sq mi (55,491 sq km), E Canada. Geography across to Minnesota--have evolved separate photoperiodic clocks to regulate their life cycles. These clocks are so location specific that Bradshaw and Holzapfel have relied on them to check where a bug came from. "When we brought animals into the lab, we would measure their response to day length just to be sure we were working with what we thought we were working with," says Holzapfel. In 2001, the pair reported its evidence that global warming has warped some mosquito populations' responses to day length. Holzapfel and Bradshaw had analyzed data that they'd collected from experiments between 1972 and 1996, in which they'd placed insects collected from different places in tiny compartments stacked in a big cabinet--"mosquito Hiltons," says Holzapfel. Each compartment had an air-cooled light that turned on and off to simulate a different day length. The researchers found that the mosquitoes' responses to light--evident in their development and dormancy patterns--differed significantly among bugs collected in northern and southern locations in 1972. However, by 1996, many of the northern populations were acting more like their southern counterparts. The most probable explanation for this change, says Bradshaw, is that global warming has extended the growing season growing season, period during which plant growth takes place. In temperate climates the growing season is limited by seasonal changes in temperature and is defined as the period between the last killing frost of spring and the first killing frost of autumn, at which for northern mosquitoes. With warmer winters, the bugs have more time to grow without going dormant. Other research teams have seen a similar northern-southern merge in the genes of fruit flies. George W. Gilchrist, who studies a fruit fly species known as Drosophila Drosophila: see fruit fly. drosophila Any member of about 1,000 species in the dipteran genus Drosophila, commonly known as fruit flies but also called vinegar flies. Some species, particularly D. subobscura, notes that researchers have long been fascinated by a peculiar genetic quirk quirk n. 1. A peculiarity of behavior; an idiosyncrasy: "Every man had his own quirks and twists" Harriet Beecher Stowe. 2. in this and some other fruit fly species. Small sections of these insects' chromosomes are reversed in some individuals but not in others. "It's like pieces of a bar code that are flipped backward," says Gilchrist. Though it's not clear what these chromosomal inversions An inversion is a chromosome rearrangement in which a segment of a chromosome is reversed end to end. An inversion occurs when a single chromosome undergoes breakage and rearrangement within itself. Inversions are of two types: paracentric and pericentric. do for the insects, researchers have noticed that the reversals follow a pattern: Wild fruit flies at the same latitude tend to have similar patterns of inversions, with the patterns shifting in a gradient extending northward north·ward adv. & adj. Toward, to, or in the north. n. A northern direction, point, or region. north from the equator. Some researchers have hypothesized that these inversions may permit fruit flies to survive in particular climates. In the Sept. 22 Science, Gilchrist and his colleagues published evidence that these inversion inversion /in·ver·sion/ (in-ver´zhun) 1. a turning inward, inside out, or other reversal of the normal relation of a part. 2. a term used by Freud for homosexuality. 3. patterns in fruit flies on three continents--Europe, North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. , and South America--have changed in response to climate. When the researchers compared chromosomal data taken in the late 1970s and the early 1980s with recent data, they found that fruit flies living at latitudes farther from the equator have gradually changed to resemble those living near the equator. "Almost every site sampled is warmer now than it was before--the chromosomes now look like the chromosome patterns from a slightly warmer place," says Gilchrist. EARLY BIRDS Researchers aren't seeing genetic changes just in fast breeders such as insects. Some studies suggest that populations of animals that take years to breed are also beginning to show genetic responses to climate change. Stan Boutin of the University of Alberta in Edmonton and his colleagues have kept track of individuals in a red squirrel squirrel, name for small or medium-sized rodents of the family Sciuridae, found throughout the world except in Australia, Madagascar, and the polar regions; it is applied especially to the tree-living species. colony in the southern Yukon for 15 years. "They're a pretty rare mammal mammal, an animal of the highest class of vertebrates, the Mammalia. The female has mammary glands, which secrete milk for the nourishment of the young after birth. , in that you can follow them right from birth through their entire lives," he says. That's because the squirrels are territorial, so Boutin and other researchers can easily track individuals year after year. The squirrels eat only one food, spruce seeds, so Boutin's team can document how much each animal consumes. Also, these animals reproduce in grass nests that are easy to spot in trees. Researchers can see when females give birth, count the number of offspring, and tag them. "It's like living in a town where no one ever leaves, and you have birth certificates for all of them,' he says. Indeed, Boutin and his colleagues have developed an extensive pedigree for the animals. Combining this information with the characteristics of individuals in the colony, Boutin and his colleagues in 2002 spotted some traits that seem to be controlled genetically. Most notably, mothers who give birth early pass on that tendency to their daughters. Because of today's warmer spring temperatures, the trees produce more cones than they did a decade ago. Over the past 10 years, Boutin says, the animals' birth dates have advanced, on average, about 18 days--enabling them to take advantage of the larger spring boom of spruce cones. Boutin notes that since the size of the cone crop varies significantly from year to year, even without global warming's effects, colonies of red squirrels probably harbor gene variants that prompt some moms each year to give birth at the most advantageous time. "The population may be genetically preadapted to cope with the rapid climate change that we're seeing," he says. Some bird populations also seem to harbor genes that may similarly help them cope with global warming. Although great tits The Great Tit, Parus major, is a passerine bird in the tit family Paridae. It is a widespread and common species throughout Europe and Asia in any sort of woodland. It is resident, and most Great Tits do not migrate. may have the genetic potential to adjust to conditions that come with warmer temperatures, they haven't made that adjustment yet, notes Daniel Nussey of the University of Cambridge in England. The birds rely on a food chain that's been skewed skewed curve of a usually unimodal distribution with one tail drawn out more than the other and the median will lie above or below the mean. skewed Epidemiology adjective Referring to an asymmetrical distribution of a population or of data in recent years by global warming, Nussey says. Trees are budding earlier, causing an earlier springtime boom in caterpillars that use the buds for food. Great tits, in turn, harvest these spring caterpillars to feed their babies. However, the great tits haven't altered their laying schedule to keep up with the caterpillars. "What you have here is an emerging mismatch mismatch 1. in blood transfusions and transplantation immunology, an incompatibility between potential donor and recipient. 2. one or more nucleotides in one of the double strands in a nucleic acid molecule without complementary nucleotides in the same position on the other between levels in the food chain that's driven by climate change," says Nussey. "There's no evidence of negative consequences yet, but you can see that there could be a major problem if it goes on." If the birds stick to their age-old laying schedule while the caterpillar boom shifts earlier, then they won't have enough food for their babies, he explains. Much like Boutin's red squirrels, individual great tits are easy to track, says Nussey. In one great tit population that researchers have studied for 50 years, the Years, The the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109] See : Time birds nest in a series of human-made boxes in a forest in the Netherlands. Scientists can peek inside a box to see when each female has laid the first egg of her clutch, check when the eggs have hatched, and eventually catch and tag the offspring. With these methods, researchers have compiled a pedigree for the colony that stretches back several decades. Using this pedigree, Nussey and his colleagues reported in the Oct. 14, 2005 Science that the birds' laying habits appear to have a genetic basis. Mothers who lay early tend to pass on that trait to their daughters. The researchers also found that females that lay early have more offspring that reenter re·en·ter also re-en·ter v. re·en·tered, re·en·ter·ing, re·en·ters v.tr. 1. To enter or come in to again. 2. To record again on a list or ledger. v.intr. the population as adults to breed than do females that lay later. If this trend continues, says Nussey, birds that lay early might replace those that lay later--correcting the mismatch between the caterpillar boom and the hatching of the birds' offspring. SURVIVOR As global warming has progressed and led to further ripples of environmental change, says Nussey, some researchers predict widespread die-offs of many species. However, he notes that his work and that of others is showing that at least some species may adjust to these changes. "The message from our study is actually quite positive about climate change. If animals have the evolutionary potential and can change their responses, then this could potentially rectify rec·ti·fy v. 1. To set right; correct. 2. To refine or purify, especially by distillation. some of the problems" associated with global warming, Nussey says. However, it's unlikely that every species possesses this intrinsic capability to adapt, says Camille Parmesan of the University of Texas in Austin. Parmesan, who studies adaptation to climate change in a variety of butterfly species, adds that a population must have both the right genetic variations and a breeding period that's not too long to keep pace with global warming. The species that are already being negatively affected by climate change probably don't have these traits, she explains. "The [species] we thought would be most sensitive--the mountaintop moun·tain·top n. The summit of a mountain. species and corals--they haven't evolved. They just died," Parmesan says. She adds that there's no evidence so far that long-lived creatures, such as polar bears polar bear, large white bear, Ursus maritimus, formerly Thalarctos maritimus, of the coasts of arctic North America. Polar bears usually live on drifting pack ice, but sometimes wander long distances inland. and penguins, in climates drastically affected by global warming are adapting to the changing conditions. It's impossible to predict how the presence or absence of such evolution could ultimately change ecological communities Ecological communities Assemblages of living organisms that occur together in an area. The nature of the forces that knit these assemblages into organized systems and those properties of assemblages that manifest this organization have been topics of intense , says Bradshaw. "We won't recognize communities--they'll be different," he says. "Is different bad or good? Different is different. Whether it's bad or good depends on your point of view." As global warming continues, some organisms will probably die out and some will stay--but life will go on, adds Holzapfel. "We are hopeful people, hopeful that adjustments will be made so the world will keep going," she says. "I'm hoping that W. smithii is one of the ones that stick around." |
|
||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion