Abstract

Urban ecosystems are rapidly expanding throughout the world, but how urban growth affects the evolutionary ecology of species living in urban areas remains largely unknown. Urban ecology has advanced our understanding of how the development of cities and towns change environmental conditions and alter ecological processes and patterns. However, despite decades of research in urban ecology, the extent to which urbanization influences evolutionary and eco‐evolutionary change has received little attention. The nascent field of urban evolutionary ecology seeks to understand how urbanization affects the evolution of populations, and how those evolutionary changes in turn influence the ecological dynamics of populations, communities, and ecosystems. Following a brief history of this emerging field, this Perspective article provides a research agenda and roadmap for future research aimed at advancing our understanding of the interplay between ecology and evolution of urban‐dwelling organisms. We identify six key questions that, if addressed, would significantly increase our understanding of how urbanization influences evolutionary processes. These questions consider how urbanization affects nonadaptive evolution, natural selection, and convergent evolution, in addition to the role of urban environmental heterogeneity on species evolution, and the roles of phenotypic plasticity versus adaptation on species’ abundance in cities. Our final question examines the impact of urbanization on evolutionary diversification. For each of these six questions, we suggest avenues for future research that will help advance the field of urban evolutionary ecology. Lastly, we highlight the importance of integrating urban evolutionary ecology into urban planning, conservation practice, pest management, and public engagement.

Highlights

  • We are living in a time of unprecedented global change, and there is a pressing need to understand how urbanization affects the evolutionary ecology of life

  • We know much less about how the ecological impacts of urbanization affect the evolution of populations of organisms living in cities (Donihue & Lambert, 2014; Johnson & Munshi‐South, 2017; Johnson, Thompson, & Saini, 2015), and how this evolution may feedback to influence ecological processes and patterns through eco‐evolutionary dynamics (Alberti, 2015; Hendry, 2016)

  • We see addressing this gap in our knowledge, including the role of urbanization in driving the evolution of genetic and phenotypic innovation more generally, as among the most important challenges for future research in urban evolutionary ecology

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Summary

Introduction

We are living in a time of unprecedented global change, and there is a pressing need to understand how urbanization affects the evolutionary ecology of life. Nonadaptive evolutionary mechanisms include mutation, genetic drift, and gene flow, and each may play important roles in the evolution of populations in urban environments.

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