Wednesday, 24 June 2009 13:05 UK
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Evolution faster when it's warmer

By Victoria Gill 
Science reporter, BBC News


The results could help explain why the warm tropics are so species-rich

Climate could have a direct effect on the speed of "molecular evolution" in 
mammals, according to a study.
Researchers have found that, among pairs of mammals of the same species, the 
DNA of those living in warmer climates changes at a faster rate.
These mutations - where one letter of the DNA code is substituted for another - 
are a first step in evolution.
The study, reported in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, could help explain 
why the tropics are so species-rich.
DNA can mutate and change imperceptibly every time a cell divides and makes a 
copy of itself.
But when one of these mutations causes a change that is advantageous for the 
animal - for example, rendering it resistant to a particular disease - it is 
often "selected for", or passed down to the next few generations of that same 
species.
Such changes, which create differences within a population but do not give rise 
to new species, are known as "microevolution".
The idea that microevolution happens faster in warmer environments is not new. 
But this is the first time the effect has been shown in mammals, which regulate 
their own body temperature.
"The result was unexpected," said Len Gillman from Auckland University of 
Technology, who led the study.
"We have previously found a similar result for plant species and other groups 
have seen it in marine animals. But since these are 'ectotherms' - their body 
temperature is controlled directly by the environment - everyone assumed that 
the effect was caused by climate altering their metabolic rate."
Scientists believe that this link between temperature and metabolic rate means 
that, in warmer climates, the germ cells that eventually develop into sperm and 
eggs divide more frequently.
"An increase in cell division provides more opportunities for mutations in the 
population over a given time," explained Dr Gillman.
"This increases the probability of advantageous mutations that are selected for 
within the species."
'Sister species'
"We suspected the same effect might be happening in mammals, because seasonal 
changes affect the animals' activity," Dr Gillman told BBC News.

Lemurs were one of the 130 pairs of closely related mammals investigated
He and his team compared the DNA of 130 pairs of mammals, looking at 
genetically similar "sister species" - where each of the pair lived at a 
different latitude or elevation.
They tracked changes in one gene that codes for a protein known as cytochrome 
b, comparing the same gene in each of the pair of mammals to a "reference" gene 
in a common ancestor.
By looking for mutations in the DNA code for this gene - each point where one 
letter in the code was substituted for another - the researchers were able to 
see which of the two mammals had "microevolved" faster.
Animals living in environments where the climate was warmer, had about 1.5 
times more of these substitutions than the animals living in cooler 
environments.
Dr Gillman explained that, at higher latitudes where environments are colder 
and less productive, animals often conserve their energy - hibernating or 
resting to reduce their metabolic activity.
"In warmer climates annual metabolic activity is likely to be greater, so this 
will lead to more total cell divisions per year in the germline."
These results support the idea that high tropical biodiversity is caused by 
faster rates of evolution in warmer climates.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8115464.stm

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