Alpine Plants Reveal the Limits of Adaptation Under Environmental Stress
A new study in Ecology and Evolution investigates how climate-driven geomorphic disturbances shape plant communities and species plasticity in high-elevation Alpine belts. Researchers analyzed paired disturbed and undisturbed sites across the Austrian and Italian Central Alps, measuring vegetation cover, species diversity, and functional traits. While disturbed sites favored stress-tolerant, cryophilic species and exhibited lower overall vegetation cover, the analysis revealed that climatic, edaphic, and topographic variables were stronger drivers of community composition than the disturbance intensity itself. Crucially, the three most abundant species displayed significant phenotypic plasticity, with disturbance primarily reducing plant height and specific leaf area—key traits linked to fitness and adaptation in harsh environments.
Study Significance: This research provides a critical test of evolutionary ecology principles, demonstrating that while species exhibit adaptive trait plasticity, their distribution and success are ultimately constrained by broader environmental gradients. For professionals focused on evolutionary biology, natural selection, and adaptation, these findings underscore the complex interplay between selective pressures from acute disturbance and the overriding influence of long-term climatic factors on population genetics and community assembly. It highlights the importance of considering multiple scales of environmental change when modeling species responses and predicting outcomes of evolutionary processes like divergent evolution or adaptive radiation in rapidly changing mountain ecosystems.
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