| Literature DB >> 24187591 |
Abstract
This paper attempts to explain circumstances under which local may be or may not be best. Natural selection may lead to local adaptation (LA), or it may be constrained by gene flow, founder effects, small population size, genetic drift, and archetype. 'Specialist' species display greater LA than 'generalist' species. Local genotypes are to a certain extent transient, being a consequence of past historical genetic patterns. Two recent meta-analyses found that while local performance exceeded the performance of a randomly chosen nonlocal population in 71% of comparisons, general adaptation across environments was as frequent as LA. Genotypes for restoration are most likely to be effective if they are adapted to current site conditions. As environmental change accelerates, both globally and locally, exceptions to 'local is best' may increase. For these reasons, 'local is best' may be better thought of as a testable hypothesis rather than as a general assumption. While either local or nonlocal plant material may be most effective for restoration practice depending on individual circumstances, local material will continue to be the first choice for restoration practitioners whenever this option is feasible and effective.Entities:
Keywords: ecological restoration; local adaptation; local is best; native plants; novel ecosystems; plant materials; provenance
Year: 2013 PMID: 24187591 PMCID: PMC3804242 DOI: 10.1111/eva.12090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evol Appl ISSN: 1752-4571 Impact factor: 5.183
Ten issues to be considered when choosing among local and nonlocal populations for ecological restoration
| Ecological issues |
| 1. The ecological state and the choice of a restoration target |
| 2. Novel ecosystems and anthromes |
| 3. Ecosystem patterns, processes, and functions |
| Genetic issues |
| 4. Variation in genetic diversity among populations of a species |
| 5. Outbreeding depression and genetic diversity |
| Evolutionary issues |
| 6. The role of natural selection |
| 7. Local adaptation and general adaptation |
| 8. Co-evolution and ecological fitting |
| Issues relating to restoration practice |
| 9. Testing methodology |
| 10. The relative frequency of opportunity for nature versus restoration practice |
Conditions necessary to declare local adaptation (LA), general adaptation (GA), or local maladaptation (as defined here) and their frequencies in one-on-one comparisons of populations A and B (local versus nonlocal) at sites A and B in two meta-analysis studies. Population A originates at site A, and population B originates at site B. Note that GA may occur in either of two ways (population A is generally superior across sites A and B, or population B is generally superior across sites A and B). The terminology and associated conditions employed here differ from the terminologies and conditions of both meta-analysis papers, which also differ from one another (see footnotes)
| Superior population | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| At site A | At site B | Leimu and Fischer ( | Hereford ( | |
| LA | A | B | 45% | 48% |
| GA | A | A | 51% | 43% |
| GA | B | B | ||
| Local maladaptation | B | A | 3% | 9% |
| Number of one-on-one comparisons ( | 1032 | 892 | ||
| Local superior to nonlocal | 71% | 71% | ||
Referred to as ‘POS-POS’ by Leimu and Fischer (2008) or ‘fitness trade-off’ by Hereford (2009).
Referred to as ‘NEG-POS’ or ‘POS-NEG’ by Leimu and Fischer (2008) or ‘no trade-off’ by Hereford (2009).
Referred to as ‘maladaptation’ or ‘NEG-NEG’ by Leimu and Fischer (2008) or ‘inverse trade-off’ by Hereford (2009).