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Browsing by Subject "evolutionary trade-offs"

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    Insect communities in saline waters consist of realized but not fundamental niche specialists
    (The Royal Society, 2018) Arribas, Paula; Gutiérrez Cánovas, Cayetano; Botella Cruz, María; Cañedo Argüelles, Miguel; Carbonell, José Antonio; Millán, Andrés; Pallarés, Susana; Velasco, Josefa; Sánchez Fernández, David; Ecología e Hidrología
    Considering how organisms adapt to stress is essential if we are to anticipate biological responses to global change in ecosystems. Communities in stress-ful environments can potentially be assembled by specialists (i.e. species that only occur in a limited range of environmental conditions) and/or generalist species with wider environmental tolerances. We review the existing litera-ture on the salinity tolerance of aquatic insects previously identified as saline specialists because they were exclusively found in saline habitats, and explore if these saline realized niche specialists are also specialists in their fundamental niches or on the contrary are fundamental niche generalist species confined to the highest salinities they can tolerate. The results suggest that species inhabiting saline waters are generalists in their funda-mental niches, with a predominant pattern of high survival in freshwater-low salinity conditions, where their fitness tends to be similar or even higher than in saline waters. Additionally, their performance in freshwater tends to be similar to related strictly freshwater species, so no apparent trade-off of generalization is shown. These results are discussed in the frame-work of the ecological and evolutionary processes driving community assembly across the osmotic stress gradient, and their potential implications for predicting impacts from saline dilution and freshwater salinization. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Salt in freshwaters: causes, ecological consequences and future prospects’.

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