Intraspecific diversity, a hidden decline: A focus on paedomorphic newts in the context of fish introductions
Denoël, M. (2018). Intraspecific diversity, a hidden decline: A focus on paedomorphic newts in the context of fish introductions. 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology. doi: 10.17011/conference/eccb2018/107225
Authors
Date
2018Copyright
© the Authors, 2018
Intraspecific variation such as polymorphisms, significant evolutionary units, and local adaptations are essential parts of biodiversity. However, conservation assessments and guidelines usually focus on the species level making therefore intraspecific variability less considered. This is particularly the case for common species that are far from extinction but not from intraspecific homogenization. Facultative paedomorphosis is a polymorphism expressed in some newt populations and which is considered of major importance in both micro and macro-evolution. Whereas most localities have only metamorphosing individuals, some have also individuals remaining aquatic all their life by retaining larval traits such as gills at the adult stage. By doing long-term surveys in the main facultative paedomorphic populations of three newt species in ponds and lakes across several European countries, we showed that paedomorphs became extirpated from most sites during the last decades (1-3). The common phenotype, the metamorph, often persisted but also declined and sometimes disappeared afterwards. The main frequent cause of decline was the introduction of alien species, specifically fish. There is some hope as resilience of paedomorphs was shown in ponds, but not yet in lakes suggesting a possible definitive loss of paedomorphosis. Globally, the situation is dramatic, particularly in a few Balkan countries where all the main populations of paedomorphs, i.e. those that received a subspecific status, disappeared from the only mountain lakes where they were described. Consequently, both management actions to remove threats, such as alien fish, and an improvement of tools to preserve intraspecific diversity of common species are urgently needed.
Cited references:
1. Denoël M, Džukić G, Kalezić ML. 2005. Effect of widespread fish introductions on paedomorphic newts in Europe. Conservation Biology 19:162-170.
2. Denoël M, Ficetola GF, Ćirović R, Radović D, Džukić G, Kalezić ML, Vukov TD. 2009. A multi-scale approach to facultative padomorphosis of European newts in the Montenegrin karst: distribution pattern, environmental variables and conservation. Biological Conservation 142:509-517.
3. Denoël M, Winandy L. 2015. The importance of phenotype diversity in conservation: Resilience of palmate newt morphotypes after fish removal in Larzac ponds (France). Biological Conservation 192:402-408.
...
Publisher
Open Science Centre, University of JyväskyläConference
ECCB2018: 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology. 12th - 15th of June 2018, Jyväskylä, Finland
Original source
https://peerageofscience.org/conference/eccb2018/107225/Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
- ECCB 2018 [712]
License
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
A multidisciplinary approach to identify multispecies hotspots of intra-specific diversity
Pezzarossa, Alice; Maiorano, Luigi; Bisconti, Roberta; Canestrelli, Daniele (Open Science Centre, University of Jyväskylä, 2018)Conservation efforts are traditionally focused on species diversity, without any explicit consideration of the underlying processes that generated (and maintained in time) that same diversity. In a global change context, ... -
The joint evolution of learning and dispersal maintains intraspecific diversity in metapopulations
Liedtke, Jannis; Fromhage, Lutz (Wiley-Blackwell, 2021)The evolution of dispersal tendencies and of cognitive abilities have both been intensely studied. Yet little attention has been given to the question of how these two aspects may relate to each other, as a result of their ... -
Responses of the hyper‐diverse community of canopy‐dwelling Hymenoptera to oak decline
Le Souchu, E.; Cours, J.; Cochenille, T.; Bouget, C.; Bankhead‐Dronnet, S.; Braet, Y.; Burguet, P.; Gabard, C.; Galkowski, C.; Gereys, B.; Herbrecht, F.; Joncour, B.; Marhic, E.; Michez, D.; Buhl, P. Neerup; Noblecourt, T.; Notton, D. G.; Penigot, W.; Rasplus, J.‐Y.; Robert, T.; Staverlokk, A.; Vincent‐Barbaroux, C.; Sallé, A. (2024)Forest decline and dieback are growing phenomena worldwide, resulting in severe, large-scale degradation of the canopy. This can profoundly alter the provision of trophic resources and microhabitats for canopy-dwelling ... -
Introduction: Social Media Discourse, (Dis)Identifications and Diversities
Leppänen, Sirpa; Kytölä, Samu; Westinen, Elina; Peuronen, Saija (Routledge, 2017)The focus in this volume is on social media discourse, (dis)identifications and diversities. It demonstrates how particular ways of mobilizing verbal, discursive and other semiotic resources serve as means for ... -
Introduction to the special issue : Beyond Self-Fashioning and Freedom—Bending, Breaking, and Adhering to Rules in Religious Contexts
Alava, Henni; Clarke, Morgan; Gusman, Alessandro (Suomen antropologinen seura, 2022)Rules are a crucial part of much religious thought and practice. Their importance or insignificance, their strictness or laxness, and their rigidity or flexibility in the face of change are constant themes of debate, both ...