Relict species research: Some concluding remarks

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenKapitelbegutachtet

Standard

Relict species research : Some concluding remarks . / Habel, Jan Christian; Schmitt, Thomas; Aßmann, Thorsten.

Relict species: Phylogeography and Conservation Biology. Hrsg. / Jan Christian Habel; Thorsten Assmann. Heidelberg [u.a.] : Springer, 2010. S. 441-442.

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenKapitelbegutachtet

Harvard

Habel, JC, Schmitt, T & Aßmann, T 2010, Relict species research: Some concluding remarks . in JC Habel & T Assmann (Hrsg.), Relict species: Phylogeography and Conservation Biology. Springer, Heidelberg [u.a.], S. 441-442. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-92160-8_26

APA

Habel, J. C., Schmitt, T., & Aßmann, T. (2010). Relict species research: Some concluding remarks . in J. C. Habel, & T. Assmann (Hrsg.), Relict species: Phylogeography and Conservation Biology (S. 441-442). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-92160-8_26

Vancouver

Habel JC, Schmitt T, Aßmann T. Relict species research: Some concluding remarks . in Habel JC, Assmann T, Hrsg., Relict species: Phylogeography and Conservation Biology. Heidelberg [u.a.]: Springer. 2010. S. 441-442 doi: 10.1007/978-3-540-92160-8_26

Bibtex

@inbook{3780596eee21490390513ffb1d3778a8,
title = "Relict species research: Some concluding remarks ",
abstract = "Relict species or populations mostly occur in small and isolated habitats and are remnants of wider distributions in the past. The recent situation of such populations, which have often been scattered along the periphery of the distribution range over long time periods, has led to independent evolutionary processes. These are reflected today in morphologically and genetically unique characteristics that occur exclusively in these populations. Such evolutionary lineages caused by long-term isolation are often described as “evolutionary significant units”; the theory emphasises the distinctiveness of locally restricted phenological, morphological, and/or genetic units. Furthermore, these differentiation processes represent an important evolutionary potential, which distinguishes relict populations from the populations of the main distribution. This evolution in relict populations may in some cases be of high value for the future adaptiveness of the species concerned. On the other hand, very isolated relict populations often also suffer from repeated bottlenecks and the negative effects of genetic drift which enforce the evolution of local uniqueness, but cause losses of genetic diversity on the taxon and intraspecific level. Thus, ecological selection acts much more strongly and therefore more quickly in small and isolated remnant populations than in core populations. Furthermore, populations at the edge of the species{\textquoteright} distribution are often exposed to ecological conditions that are different from those in the core area. This selection under different habitat conditions can lead to new allele combinations essential to survival under conditions which differ from those of the core area; they may therefore be relevant for responses to the challenge of future climate changes. Following the contributions presented in this book, we conclude that peripheric populations are of particular importance for conserving the complete evolutionary and adaptive potential of species and their intraspecific variability in terms of the Convention on Biological Diversity. ",
keywords = "Biology, Core Area, Future Climate Change, Core Population, Allele Combination, Intraspecific Variability",
author = "Habel, {Jan Christian} and Thomas Schmitt and Thorsten A{\ss}mann",
year = "2010",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-540-92160-8_26",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-540-92159-2",
pages = "441--442",
editor = "Habel, {Jan Christian} and Assmann, {Thorsten }",
booktitle = "Relict species",
publisher = "Springer",
address = "Germany",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Relict species research

T2 - Some concluding remarks

AU - Habel, Jan Christian

AU - Schmitt, Thomas

AU - Aßmann, Thorsten

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - Relict species or populations mostly occur in small and isolated habitats and are remnants of wider distributions in the past. The recent situation of such populations, which have often been scattered along the periphery of the distribution range over long time periods, has led to independent evolutionary processes. These are reflected today in morphologically and genetically unique characteristics that occur exclusively in these populations. Such evolutionary lineages caused by long-term isolation are often described as “evolutionary significant units”; the theory emphasises the distinctiveness of locally restricted phenological, morphological, and/or genetic units. Furthermore, these differentiation processes represent an important evolutionary potential, which distinguishes relict populations from the populations of the main distribution. This evolution in relict populations may in some cases be of high value for the future adaptiveness of the species concerned. On the other hand, very isolated relict populations often also suffer from repeated bottlenecks and the negative effects of genetic drift which enforce the evolution of local uniqueness, but cause losses of genetic diversity on the taxon and intraspecific level. Thus, ecological selection acts much more strongly and therefore more quickly in small and isolated remnant populations than in core populations. Furthermore, populations at the edge of the species’ distribution are often exposed to ecological conditions that are different from those in the core area. This selection under different habitat conditions can lead to new allele combinations essential to survival under conditions which differ from those of the core area; they may therefore be relevant for responses to the challenge of future climate changes. Following the contributions presented in this book, we conclude that peripheric populations are of particular importance for conserving the complete evolutionary and adaptive potential of species and their intraspecific variability in terms of the Convention on Biological Diversity.

AB - Relict species or populations mostly occur in small and isolated habitats and are remnants of wider distributions in the past. The recent situation of such populations, which have often been scattered along the periphery of the distribution range over long time periods, has led to independent evolutionary processes. These are reflected today in morphologically and genetically unique characteristics that occur exclusively in these populations. Such evolutionary lineages caused by long-term isolation are often described as “evolutionary significant units”; the theory emphasises the distinctiveness of locally restricted phenological, morphological, and/or genetic units. Furthermore, these differentiation processes represent an important evolutionary potential, which distinguishes relict populations from the populations of the main distribution. This evolution in relict populations may in some cases be of high value for the future adaptiveness of the species concerned. On the other hand, very isolated relict populations often also suffer from repeated bottlenecks and the negative effects of genetic drift which enforce the evolution of local uniqueness, but cause losses of genetic diversity on the taxon and intraspecific level. Thus, ecological selection acts much more strongly and therefore more quickly in small and isolated remnant populations than in core populations. Furthermore, populations at the edge of the species’ distribution are often exposed to ecological conditions that are different from those in the core area. This selection under different habitat conditions can lead to new allele combinations essential to survival under conditions which differ from those of the core area; they may therefore be relevant for responses to the challenge of future climate changes. Following the contributions presented in this book, we conclude that peripheric populations are of particular importance for conserving the complete evolutionary and adaptive potential of species and their intraspecific variability in terms of the Convention on Biological Diversity.

KW - Biology

KW - Core Area

KW - Future Climate Change

KW - Core Population

KW - Allele Combination

KW - Intraspecific Variability

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84855300201&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1007/978-3-540-92160-8_26

DO - 10.1007/978-3-540-92160-8_26

M3 - Chapter

SN - 978-3-540-92159-2

SP - 441

EP - 442

BT - Relict species

A2 - Habel, Jan Christian

A2 - Assmann, Thorsten

PB - Springer

CY - Heidelberg [u.a.]

ER -

DOI