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Titre de la review

Evolution de la vie dans les milieux urbains

Résumé de la review

L'évolution consiste en le changement de fréquences alléliques d'une génération à l'autre dans une population. Plusieurs forces évolutives sont capable de ce changement : la sélection naturelle ou sexuelle, la mutation, la dérive génétique et le flux de gènes dans la population. Ces mécanismes ont été documentés avec des cas.
La review montre des études qui démontrent des changements dans les processus évolutifs dans les milieux urbains, avec des observations du changement des fréquences alléliques sur le temps ou l'espace, ou bien changements de phénotypes héritables.
Les changements peuvent être dus à de la plasticité phénotypique et non à des bases génétiques comme la morphologie, le comportement...

Rigueur de la review

Il y a un regroupement des études sur différents organismes avec pour chaque cas étudié le type de mécanisme impliqué, le niveau affecté (phénotypique / génétique) et la région.
La review détaille chaque force évolutive précédemment présentées avec l'impact des forces en milieu urbain, un détail des études et ce que suggèrent celles-ci.

Ce que cette review apporte au débat

Elle développe les différents forces et les dynamiques qui interviennent dans la diversité des espèces en milieu urbain.
Elle fournit des cas où agissent une ou plusieurs de ces forces, chez divers êtres vivants (virus, plantes, insecte, poisson, amphibiens et reptiles, oiseaux et mammifères).

Publiée il y a plus de 6 ans par E. Conte.
Dernière modification il y a plus de 6 ans.
Review : Evolution of life in urban environments
  • 1
  • Auteurs
    Marc T. J. Johnson et Jason Munshi-South
  • Année de publication
    2017
  • Journal
    Scicence
  • Abstract (dans sa langue originale)

    BACKGROUND
    The extent of urban areas is increasing around the world, and most humans now live in cities. Urbanization results in dramatic environmental change, including increased temperatures, more impervious surface cover, altered hydrology, and elevated pollution. Urban areas also host more non-native species and reduced abundance and diversity of many native species. These environmental changes brought by global urbanization are creating novel ecosystems with unknown consequences for the evolution of life. Here, we consider how early human settlements led to the evolution of human commensals, including some of the most notorious pests and disease vectors. We also comprehensively review how contemporary urbanization affects the evolution of species that coinhabit cities.

    ADVANCES
    A recent surge of research shows that urbanization affects both nonadaptive and adaptive evolution. Some of the clearest results of urban evolution show that cities elevate the strength of random genetic drift (stochastic changes in allele frequencies) and restrict gene flow (the movement of alleles between populations due to dispersal and mating). Populations of native species in cities often represent either relicts that predate urbanization or populations that established after a city formed. Both scenarios frequently result in a loss of genetic diversity within populations and increased differentiation between populations. Fragmentation and urban infrastructure also create barriers to dispersal, and consequently, gene flow is often reduced among city populations, which further contributes to genetic differentiation between populations.

    The influence of urbanization on mutation and adaptive evolution are less clear. A small number of studies suggest that industrial pollution can elevate mutation rates, but the pervasiveness of this effect is unknown. A better studied phenomenon are the effects of urbanization on evolution by natural selection. A growing number of studies show that plant and animal populations experience divergent selection between urban and nonurban environments. This divergent selection has led to adaptive evolution in life history, morphology, physiology, behavior, and reproductive traits. These adaptations typically evolve in response to pesticide use, pollution, local climate, or the physical structure of cities. Despite these important results, the genetic basis of adaptive evolution is known from only a few cases. Most studies also examine only a few populations in one city, and experimental validation is rare.

    OUTLOOK
    The study of evolution in urban areas provides insights into both fundamental and applied problems in biology. The thousands of cities throughout the world share some features while differing in other aspects related to their age, historical context, governmental policies, and local climate. Thus, the phenomenon of global urbanization represents an unintended but highly replicated global study of experimental evolution. We can harness this global urban experiment to understand the repeatability and pace of evolution in response to human activity. Among the most important unresolved questions is, how often do native and exotic species adapt to the particular environmental challenges found in cities? Such adaptations could be the difference as to whether a species persists or vanishes from urban areas. In this way, the study of urban evolution can help us understand how evolution in populations may contribute to conservation of rare species, and how populations can be managed to facilitate the establishment of resilient and sustainable urban ecosystems. In a similar way, understanding evolution in urban areas can lead to improved human health. For example, human pests frequently adapt to pesticides and evade control efforts because of our limited understanding of the size of populations and movement of individuals. Applied evolutionary studies could lead to more effective mitigation of pests and disease agents. The study of urban evolution has rapidly become an important frontier in biology, with implications for healthy and sustainable human populations in urban ecosystems.

  • Identifiant unique
    https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aam8327
  • Accès libre
    Accéder à la référence
  • Apparait dans la controverse
    Les villes sont-elles un moteur de diversité pour les espèces sauvages ?
  • Comment les contributeurs jugent la qualité scientifique de cette référence :

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  • Les villes sont-elles un moteur de diversité pour les espèces sauvages ? Oui ou Non
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