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Trans-generational plasticity and bet-hedging: a common eco-evolutionary framework of utter relevance for climate change adaptation
[post]
2019
unpublished
Organisms are typically assumed to respond to environmental change by genetic adaptation, phenotypic plasticity, or by genetic adaptation of phenotypic plasticity - the latter is in the focus of contemporary calls for an extended evolutionary synthesis, because it impacts evolutionary dynamics by tinkering with the raw material for selection (phenotypes). Diversified bet-hedging, a risk-spreading strategy that affects the phenotypic variance among one's offspring, can provoke a similar impact,
doi:10.32942/osf.io/trg34
fatcat:ewpsjyhjdvcvbiayvfynm746ta