Vancouver Sun

Human action reshaping evolution: researcher

UBC biologist says the presence of people is driving species change around the globe

- BOB WEBER

Swallows are evolving smaller, more manoeuvrab­le wings to help them dodge buildings and vehicles.

Some fish are evolving mouths that are smaller and harder to hook.

Large animals from caribou to tuna are disappeari­ng.

Meanwhile, it’s boom time for anything not too fussy about where it lives or what it eats.

“It’s a reshaping of the tree of life,” said Sarah Otto, a University of British Columbia researcher, whose paper was published on Wednesday by the London-based Proceeding­s of the Royal Society.

Otto, a highly regarded theoretica­l biologist, says the activities and presence of human beings have become one of the largest drivers of evolutiona­ry change everywhere on the planet.

“Human impacts on the world are not just local,” she said. “They are changing the course of evolutiona­ry history for all species on the planet, and that’s a remarkable concept to ponder.”

Earth scientists have long discussed the idea of the Anthropoce­ne — a period of Earth’s history defined by geological markers of human impact. After reviewing dozens of research papers, Otto concludes the planet’s biology is becoming similarly marked as plants and animals respond to human pressure.

Her paper is replete with examples from bird species slowly forgetting to migrate to mosquito breeds adapted specifical­ly to undergroun­d subway tunnels.

Backyard bird feeders are behind changes in the beak shape and strength of house finches. Different mammals are becoming nocturnal as a way to avoid human conflict.

Introduced species change the ground rules for native plants and animals.

It’s a mistake to think evolution requires millennia, said Otto. “Evolution happens really fast if the selection regimes are strong. We can see sometimes in plant population­s evolutiona­ry change in the course of years.”

If the changes come too fast for evolution to keep up, there’s always extinction.

Rates of species loss are now estimated to be 1,000 times higher than they were before human domination. More than one in five of all plant and animal species are considered at risk.

Extinction­s have always happened. But Otto said they’re happening at such a pace and in response to such similar pressures that they are reducing the ability of evolution to respond to change.

“We’re losing the ability for evolution to bounce back.”

Forcing species into a humanforme­d box reduces variabilit­y, leaving evolution less to work with in response to future changes. And wiping species out removes them forever.

“If we’re eliminatin­g the largebodie­d mammals, even if humans went extinct on the planet, we’re not going to see an immediate return of ecosystems to have the right balance of small, medium and large species,” Otto said.

“We’re cutting off options. We’re cutting off options both within species by eliminatin­g variabilit­y, and we’re also cutting off options at the tree-of-life level by cutting off species.”

Species that are doing well are generalist­s — crows, coyotes, dandelions, rats, pigeons — the ones that can both tolerate and thrive in human-altered environmen­ts, said Otto.

The biggest single humancause­d evolutiona­ry pressure is climate change, Otto said.

“The No. 1 thing we have to do is tackle climate change. If we don’t do that, we’re going to lose a lot more species.”

Human impacts on the world are not just local. They are changing the course of evolutiona­ry history for all species on the planet ... that’s a remarkable concept.

 ?? MARK YUKNAT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A UBC researcher says tree swallows are evolving smaller wings to help dodge vehicles and buildings.
MARK YUKNAT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A UBC researcher says tree swallows are evolving smaller wings to help dodge vehicles and buildings.

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