Phenotypic plasticity and population viability: The importance of environmental predictability

  • Thomas E. Reed
  • , S. Waples Robin
  • , Daniel E. Schindler
  • , Jeffrey J. Hard
  • , Michael T. Kinnison

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Phenotypic plasticity plays a key role in modulating how environmental variation influences population dynamics, but we have only rudimentary understanding of how plasticity interacts with the magnitude and predictability of environmental variation to affect population dynamics and persistence. We developed a stochastic individual-based model, in which phenotypes could respond to a temporally fluctuating environmental cue and fitness depended on the match between the phenotype and a randomly fluctuating trait optimum, to assess the absolute fitness and population dynamic consequences of plasticity under different levels of environmental stochasticity and cue reliability. When cue and optimum were tightly correlated, plasticity buffered absolute fitness from environmental variability, and population size remained high and relatively invariant. In contrast, when this correlation weakened and environmental variability was high, strong plasticity reduced population size, and populations with excessively strong plasticity had substantially greater extinction probability. Given that environments might become more variable and unpredictable in the future owing to anthropogenic influences, reaction norms that evolved under historic selective regimes could imperil populations in novel or changing environmental contexts. We suggest that demographic models (e.g. population viability analyses) would benefit from a more explicit consideration of how phenotypic plasticity influences population responses to environmental change.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3391-3400
Number of pages10
JournalProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume277
Issue number1699
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 22 Nov 2010
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Cue reliability
  • Environmental stochasticity
  • Evolutionary trap
  • Persistence
  • Population dynamics
  • Reaction norm

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