Abstract:
Recent reviews have emphasized the need to incorporate genomics into ecological field studies to further
understand how species respond to changing environmental conditions. Genomic tools, such as cDNA (complementary
DNA) microarrays, allow for the simultaneous analysis of gene expression of thousands of genes
from all or part of an organism’s genome (the transcription profile), thereby revealing the genetic mechanisms
that underlie species’ responses to environmental change. However, despite their potential, two major
limitations have hindered the incorporation of microarrays and other genomic tools into field studies: (1) the
limited availability of microarrays for ecologically relevant, non-model species and limited financial
resources for developing new microarrays; and (2) concern that high sensitivity of gene expression to even
subtle alterations in environmental conditions will hinder detection of relevant changes in field measures of
transcription profiles. Here, we show that with cross-species hybridizations of microarrays developed for a
closely related model organism, an appropriate experimental design, and sufficient replication, transcriptional
profiling can successfully be incorporated into field studies. In this way, relevant changes in gene
expression with changing environmental conditions can be detected.