Published February 18, 2025
| Version v1
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Local Adaptation Is Highest in Populations With Stable Long-Term Growth
Creators
- 1. University of Chicago
- 2. Cornell University
- 3. Duke University
- 4. Grinnell College
- 5. University of Minnesota
Description
Theory suggests that the drivers of demographic variation and local adaptation are shared and may feedback on one other. Despite some evidence for these links in controlled settings, the relationship between local adaptation and demography remains largely unexplored in natural conditions. Using 10 years of demographic data and two reciprocal transplant experiments, we tested predictions about the relationship between the magnitude of local adaptation and demographic variation (population growth rates and their elasticities to vital rates) across 10 populations of a well-studied annual plant. In both years, we found a strong unimodal relationship between mean home-away local adaptation and stochastic population growth rates. Other predicted links were either weakly or not supported by our data. Our results suggest that declining and rapidly growing populations exhibit reduced local adaptation, potentially due to maladaptation and relaxed selection, respectively.
Data availability
Data and code supporting this manuscript are archived in the Dryad Digital Repository (doi: 10.5061/dryad.f1vhhmh24).Files
Local-Adaptation-Is-Highest-in-Populations-With-Stable-Long-Term-Growth.pdf
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1111/ele.70071
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:14600
Funding
- Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation
- 0515409
- Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation
- 0515428
- Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation
- 0515466
- Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation
- 1255141
- Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation
- 1256288
- Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation
- 1256316
- Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation
- 1753980
- Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation
- 1754026
- Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation
- 1754157
- Division of Environmental Biology, National Science Foundation
- 1754299