“…Nevertheless, far more accurately designed empirical studies are required to improve the current knowledge on the evolutionary trends under stress scenarios promoted by climate change (Gienapp et al., ; Merilä & Hendry, ). Importantly, while genetic change can indeed extend the adjusting capacity of populations facing environmental fluctuation as allowed by phenotypic plasticity (see Merilä & Hendry, for a comprehensive review on the interplay of these two processes, and Scheiner, and Scheiner, Barfield, & Holt, for key aspects regarding genetic assimilation), selection of better fit phenotypes can be costly, for example by reducing intra‐population genetic variability through genetic erosion (e.g., Fasola, Ribeiro, & Lopes, ; Ribeiro & Lopes, ) or by trading‐off with decreased tolerance to new stressors (Janssens, Van Dinh, Debecker, Bervoets, & Stoks, ; Kelly, DeBiasse, Villela, Roberts, & Cecola, ; Venâncio, Ribeiro, Soares, & Lopes, ). In this context, genetic changes are normally understood as those involving the alteration of gene sequences, that is, the alteration of frequencies of different alleles.…”