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Adaptation across geographic ranges is consistent with strong selection in marginal climates and legacies of range expansion
by
Lee-Yaw, Julie A.
, Hargreaves, Anna L.
, Angert, Amy L.
, Muir, Christopher D.
, Anstett, Daniel N.
, Usui, Takuji
, Branch, Haley A.
, Bontrager, Megan
in
Adaptation
/ Evolution & development
/ Expansion load
/ Fitness
/ Gene flow
/ Genetic load
/ geographic range limit
/ Geographical distribution
/ local adaptation
/ ORIGINAL ARTICLE
/ peripheral population
/ Population genetics
/ Populations
/ quantitative synthesis
/ Range extension
/ Reproductive fitness
/ Species
/ transplant experiment
2021
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Adaptation across geographic ranges is consistent with strong selection in marginal climates and legacies of range expansion
by
Lee-Yaw, Julie A.
, Hargreaves, Anna L.
, Angert, Amy L.
, Muir, Christopher D.
, Anstett, Daniel N.
, Usui, Takuji
, Branch, Haley A.
, Bontrager, Megan
in
Adaptation
/ Evolution & development
/ Expansion load
/ Fitness
/ Gene flow
/ Genetic load
/ geographic range limit
/ Geographical distribution
/ local adaptation
/ ORIGINAL ARTICLE
/ peripheral population
/ Population genetics
/ Populations
/ quantitative synthesis
/ Range extension
/ Reproductive fitness
/ Species
/ transplant experiment
2021
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Adaptation across geographic ranges is consistent with strong selection in marginal climates and legacies of range expansion
by
Lee-Yaw, Julie A.
, Hargreaves, Anna L.
, Angert, Amy L.
, Muir, Christopher D.
, Anstett, Daniel N.
, Usui, Takuji
, Branch, Haley A.
, Bontrager, Megan
in
Adaptation
/ Evolution & development
/ Expansion load
/ Fitness
/ Gene flow
/ Genetic load
/ geographic range limit
/ Geographical distribution
/ local adaptation
/ ORIGINAL ARTICLE
/ peripheral population
/ Population genetics
/ Populations
/ quantitative synthesis
/ Range extension
/ Reproductive fitness
/ Species
/ transplant experiment
2021
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Adaptation across geographic ranges is consistent with strong selection in marginal climates and legacies of range expansion
Journal Article
Adaptation across geographic ranges is consistent with strong selection in marginal climates and legacies of range expansion
2021
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Overview
Every species experiences limits to its geographic distribution. Some evolutionary models predict that populations at range edges are less well adapted to their local environments due to drift, expansion load, or swamping gene flow from the range interior. Alternatively, populations near range edges might be uniquely adapted to marginal environments. In this study, we use a database of transplant studies that quantify performance at broad geographic scales to test how local adaptation, site quality, and population quality change from spatial and climatic range centers toward edges. We find that populations from poleward edges perform relatively poorly, both on average across all sites (15% lower population quality) and when compared to other populations at home (31% relative fitness disadvantage), consistent with these populations harboring high genetic load. Populations from equatorial edges also perform poorly on average (18% lower population quality) but, in contrast, outperform foreign populations (16% relative fitness advantage), suggesting that populations from equatorial edges have strongly adapted to unique environments. Finally, we find that populations from sites that are thermally extreme relative to the species’ niche demonstrate strong local adaptation, regardless of their geographic position. Our findings indicate that both nonadaptive processes and adaptive evolution contribute to variation in adaptation across species’ ranges.
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