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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The implications of nongenetic inheritance for evolution in changing environments.

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TLDR
A research program encompassing experimental studies that test for transgenerational effects of a range of environmental factors, followed by theoretical and empirical studies on the population‐level consequences of such effects are outlined.
Abstract
Nongenetic inheritance is a potentially important but poorly understood factor in population responses to rapid environmental change. Accumulating evidence indicates that nongenetic inheritance influences a diverse array of traits in all organisms and can allow for the transmission of environmentally induced phenotypic changes (‘acquired traits’), as well as spontaneously arising and highly mutable variants. We review models of adaptation to changing environments under the assumption of a broadened model of inheritance that incorporates nongenetic mechanisms of transmission, and survey relevant empirical examples. Theory suggests that nongenetic inheritance can increase the rate of both phenotypic and genetic change and, in some cases, alter the direction of change. Empirical evidence shows that a diversity of phenotypes – spanning a continuum from adaptive to pathological – can be transmitted nongenetically. The presence of nongenetic inheritance therefore complicates our understanding of evolutionary responses to environmental change. We outline a research program encompassing experimental studies that test for transgenerational effects of a range of environmental factors, followed by theoretical and empirical studies on the population-level consequences of such effects.

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Parental Effects and Climate Change: Will Avian Incubation Behavior Shield Embryos from Increasing Environmental Temperatures?

TL;DR: It is argued that incubation behavior may be an important mediator of avian responses to climate change, and it is demonstrated that the predicted increase in air temperature by 2100 in the central United States will increase temperatures eggs experience during afternoon off-bouts, and the proportion of nests exposed to lethal temperatures.
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Examining the Role of DNA Methylation in Transcriptomic Plasticity of Early Stage Sea Urchins: Developmental and Maternal Effects in a Kelp Forest Herbivore

TL;DR: The results suggest that different forms of environmentally induced plasticity are observable across different time scales and that DNA methylation dynamics may be uncoupled from fast transcriptional responses to the environment and whole organism traits.
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Parental thermal environment alters offspring sex ratio and fitness in an oviparous lizard.

TL;DR: The interactive effects of treatment on offspring sex and growth are consistent with adaptive explanations for the existence of temperature-dependent sex determination in this species, and the greater performance recorded in short bask offspring may represent an anticipatory parental effect to aid offspring in predicted conditions of restricted thermal opportunity.
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Faster Is Not Always Better: Selection on Growth Rate Fluctuates across Life History and Environments

TL;DR: This study highlights the potential for fluctuating selection pressures throughout the life history and across environments to play an important role in this process of growth rate evolution.
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Ecological Epigenetics: An Introduction to the Symposium

TL;DR: By characterizing environmentally dependent epigenetic variation in natural populations, this issue will enhance the understanding of developmental, ecological, and evolutionary phenomena and introduce some of the common goals and challenges shared by those pursuing this critical field.
References
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MonographDOI

Not by genes alone: How culture transformed human evolution.

TL;DR: "Not by Genes Alone" offers a radical interpretation of human evolution, arguing that the authors' ecological dominance and their singular social systems stem from a psychology uniquely adapted to create complex culture.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climate change and evolutionary adaptation

TL;DR: The challenges to understand when evolution will occur and to identify potential evolutionary winners as well as losers, such as species lacking adaptive capacity living near physiological limits can be met through realistic models of evolutionary change linked to experimental data across a range of taxa.
Journal ArticleDOI

Epigenetic Transgenerational Actions of Endocrine Disruptors and Male Fertility

TL;DR: The ability of an environmental factor to reprogram the germ line and to promote a transgenerational disease state has significant implications for evolutionary biology and disease etiology.
Book

Niche Construction: The Neglected Process in Evolution

TL;DR: This book extends evolutionary theory by formally including niche construction and ecological inheritance as additional evolutionary processes, and demonstrates how the theory can resolve long-standing problems in ecology, particularly by advancing the sorely needed synthesis of ecology and evolution.
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