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Urban Environments Promote Adaptation to Multiple Stressors
Public and global health
First published: 19 February 2025
Date (DD-MM-YYYY)
26-03-2025 to 26-03-2026
Available on-demand until 26th March 2026
Cost
Free
Education type
Article
CPD subtype
On-demand
Description
Anthropogenic activities have drastically changed environmental conditions worldwide, negatively impacting biodiversity and ecosystem services. At the same time, the majority of the human population lives in urban areas that are greatly altered from natural habitats. Nevertheless, many species thrive in these urban environments. To improve our knowledge of evolution and adaptation in these anthropogenically impacted habitats, we conducted the widest series of stress experiments to date with three marine taxa: one mussel and two gammarid species. We compared intraspecific populations from protected and human-altered habitats to determine their tolerance to salinity, temperature and partial pressure of CO2 in water (pCO2) regimes. Populations from impacted habitats typically outperformed protected habitat populations, with individuals from the most impacted habitat being the most robust. We propose that urban populations are adapting to life in disturbed environments—this adaptation concurrently promotes more resilient rescue populations but potentially confers increased invasion risk from non-native species.
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