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What Do We Really Know About Adaptation at Range Edges?

Annual Review of Ecology Evolution and Systematics 2020 172 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Amy L. Angert, Megan Bontrager, Jon Ågren

Summary

This review evaluated current theory and empirical evidence on how evolutionary forces shape adaptation at stable and transient range margins of species distributions. It found that trait divergence at leading range edges is frequently supported but that fitness declines beyond range boundaries are common, complicating predictions about species' responses to shifting climates.

Recent theory and empirical evidence have provided new insights regarding how evolutionary forces interact to shape adaptation at stable and transient range margins. Predictions regarding trait divergence at leading edges are frequently supported. However, declines in fitness at and beyond edges show that trait divergence has sometimes been insufficient to maintain high fitness, so identifying constraints to adaptation at range edges remains a key challenge. Indirect evidence suggests that range expansion may be limited by adaptive genetic variation, but direct estimates of genetic constraints at and beyond range edges are still scarce. Sequence data suggest increased genetic load in edge populations in several systems, but its causes and fitness consequences are usually poorly understood. The balance between maladaptive and positive effects of gene flow on fitness at range edges deserves further study. It is becoming increasingly clear that characterizations about degree of adaptation based solely on geographical peripherality are unsupported.

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