Results for 'notothenioids'

4 found
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  1.  17
    How will fish that evolved at constant sub‐zero temperatures cope with global warming? Notothenioids as a case study.Tomaso Patarnello, Cinzia Verde, Guido di Prisco, Luca Bargelloni & Lorenzo Zane - 2011 - Bioessays 33 (4):260 - 268.
    Current climate change has raised concerns over the fate of the stenothermal Antarctic marine fauna (animals that evolved to live in narrow ranges of cold temperatures). The present paper focuses on Notothenioidei, a taxonomic group that dominates Antarctic fish. Notothenioids evolved in the Southern Ocean over the last 20 million years, providing an example of a marine species flock with unique adaptations to the cold at morphological, physiological and biochemical levels. Their phenotypic modifications are often accompanied by ‘irreversible’ genomic (...)
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  2.  19
    How will fish that evolved at constant sub‐zero temperatures cope with global warming? Notothenioids as a case study.Tomaso Patarnello, Cinzia Verde, Guido di Prisco, Luca Bargelloni & Lorenzo Zane - 2011 - Bioessays 33 (4):260-268.
    Current climate change has raised concerns over the fate of the stenothermal Antarctic marine fauna (animals that evolved to live in narrow ranges of cold temperatures). The present paper focuses on Notothenioidei, a taxonomic group that dominates Antarctic fish. Notothenioids evolved in the Southern Ocean over the last 20 million years, providing an example of a marine species flock with unique adaptations to the cold at morphological, physiological and biochemical levels. Their phenotypic modifications are often accompanied by ‘irreversible’ genomic (...)
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  3.  89
    Evolution in response to climate change: In pursuit of the missing evidence.Juha Merilä - 2012 - Bioessays 34 (9):811-818.
    Climate change is imposing intensified and novel selection pressures on organisms by altering abiotic and biotic environmental conditions on Earth, but studies demonstrating genetic adaptation to climate change mediated selection are still scarce. Evidence is accumulating to indicate that both genetic and ecological constrains may often limit populations' abilities to adapt to large scale effects of climate warming. These constraints may predispose many organisms to respond to climate change with range shifts and phenotypic plasticity, rather than through evolutionary adaptation. In (...)
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  4.  44
    Understanding phenotypic responses to global change.Laura Gangoso, Rocío Márquez-Ferrando, Francisco Ramírez, Ivan Gomez-Mestre & Jordi Figuerola - 2013 - Bioessays 35 (5):491-495.
    Editor's suggested further reading in BioEssays: Evolution in response to climate change: In pursuit of the missing evidence AbstractHow will fish that evolved at constant sub‐zero temperatures cope with global warming? Notothenioids as a case study Abstract.
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