Wednesday, June 10, 2026
News

Study: Genetic diversity among species reduces climate change vulnerability

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

Washington | January 30, 2023 11:33:00 PM IST
Genetic diversity is the building block that allows populations to vary in response to environmental changes, hence the more diversity, the better.

Rapid climate warming is challenging many species to evolve and adapt quickly enough to avoid extinction, particularly species that don't tolerate much environmental variation, such as those from cooler high-elevation habitats, which may lack genetic diversity important for adapting to climate change.

Hybridization, the process of mixing different species, can potentially help the vulnerable adopt and rapidly exploit novel genetic diversity from species that might already be adapted to warmer environments. However, hybrid populations have traditionally been considered of little conservation value.

New research, published in the prestigious journal Nature Climate Change provides rare evidence that natural hybridization can reduce the risk of extinction of species threatened by climate change.

This concept is similar to how the historic mixing between our ancestors and Neanderthals led to improved fitness in some modern human populations.

The team, including lead-author Dr Chris Brauer, project coordinator Professor Luciano Beheregaray and other biologists travelled to the Wet Tropics region of northeastern Australia to collect samples of five species of tropical rainbowfish along an elevational gradient.

They produced genomic data from the samples and discovered several pure and hybrid populations of rainbowfish. They also identified genes that enable rainbowfish populations to adapt to climate variation across the region and used environmental models to work out how much evolution will likely be required for populations to keep pace with climate change in the future.

Dr Brauer says that populations of cool-adapted upland species that have hybridised with a warm-adapted lowland species showed reduced vulnerability to future climates.

"These mixed populations contain more diversity at genes we think are important for climate adaptation, and are therefore more likely to persist in warmer environments".

The finding that hybridisation (genetic mixing) may facilitate rapid adaptation to climate change has important implications for many threatened species.

MELFU Director and Flinders University Professor Luciano Beheregaray says that this study highlights the underappreciated conservation value of hybrid populations.

"Our findings are good news for biodiversity. They indicate that genetic mixing is an important tool for conservation that can contribute to natural evolutionary rescue of species threatened by climate change." (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS (0)
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE SCIENCE NEWS
Apple announces iOS 27 at WWDC 2026, iPh...
Apple announces macOS 27 'Golden Gate' a...
Apple unveils next-generation Apple Inte...
Gujarat Forensic Science University earn...
Anthropic issues big AI warning, calls f...
Octopuses can use mirrors to locate food...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
'Nation's prestige has risen': Union Min...
NDA to gather for crucial meeting on Wed...
Oppn parties ought to acknowledge public...
EC to meet Congress delegation on Wednes...
Uttam Nagar Holi murder case: Court sets...
'Women's role crucial to achieve economi...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
Assam's Vaishnavite heritage to res... 
US launches strikes against Iran af... 
" India, Israel united in their fir... 
Oppn parties ought to acknowledge p... 
"US must respond": Trump after Iran... 
'Bharat Bhhagya Viddhaata' cast hig... 
Slovak envoy underscores growing de... 
"Nation's prestige has risen": Unio...