4.5 Article

Strong genetic differentiation but not local adaptation toward the range limit of a coastal dune plant

Journal

EVOLUTION
Volume 70, Issue 11, Pages 2520-2536

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/evo.13047

Keywords

Geographic range; local adaptation; Onagraceae; peripheral populations; population genetic structure; reciprocal transplant experiment

Funding

  1. CONACYT Mexico
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

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All species have limited geographic distributions; but the ecological and evolutionary mechanisms causing range limits are largely unknown. That many species' geographic range limits are coincident with niche limits suggests limited evolutionary potential of marginal populations to adapt to conditions experienced beyond the range. We provide a test of range limit theory by combining population genetic analysis of microsatellite polymorphisms with a transplant experiment within, at the edge of, and 60 km beyond the northern range of a coastal dune plant. Contrary to expectations, lifetime fitness increased toward the range limit with highest fitness achieved by most populations at and beyond the range edge. Genetic differentiation among populations was strong, with very low, nondirectional gene flow suggesting range limitation via constraints to dispersal. In contrast, however, local adaptation was negligible, and a distance-dependent decline in fitness only occurred for those populations furthest from home when planted beyond the range limit. These results challenge a commonly held assumption that stable range limits match niche limits, but also raise questions about the unique value of peripheral populations in expanding species' geographical ranges.

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