Evolutionary Footprint: A Systemic Indicator in Evolution, Ecology and Conservation.
Genissel T, Robert A, Lecomte J, Sarrazin F
Pollinators
When bees and other pollinators disappear from your neighborhood, the wildflowers left behind don't just struggle—they begin evolving differently, potentially losing traits that made them beautiful, resilient, or useful to other wildlife over generations.
When humans change the environment—by eliminating pollinators, for example—plants and animals don't just suffer in the short term; they start evolving in new directions that can permanently alter what those species look like and how they survive. Researchers created a scoring system to measure this 'evolutionary footprint,' much like a carbon footprint, so we can actually put a number on how much human activity is bending the evolutionary path of life on Earth. One of their test cases showed a plant species changing in direct response to pollinator loss caused by people.
Key Findings
The 'evolutionary footprint' framework quantifies human impact on both micro-evolution (genetic changes within populations) and macro-evolution (species-level divergence and phylogenetic patterns) using measurable metrics.
A plant species case study demonstrated measurable evolutionary change in adaptive traits directly attributable to human-induced pollinator decline, showing evolution can occur on observable timescales.
The framework incorporates natural history baselines to contextualize the magnitude of change, distinguishing human-driven evolutionary shifts from natural background rates of evolution.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Scientists propose a new measurement called the 'evolutionary footprint' to track how human activities—like reducing pollinators—alter the long-term genetic and adaptive trajectories of species. This gives conservation biologists a concrete tool to score evolutionary damage alongside habitat loss and extinction risk.
Abstract Preview
The growing awareness of evolutionary responses to human-induced environmental changes highlights the need to better understand and integrate evolutionary perspectives into life sciences and, more ...
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