Abstract

Climatic niche shifts have been documented in a number of invasive species by comparing the native and adventive climatic ranges in which they occur. However, these shifts likely represent changes in the realized climatic niches of invasive species, and may not necessarily be driven by genetic changes in climatic affinities. Until now the role of rapid niche evolution in the spread of invasive species remains a challenging issue with conflicting results. Here, we document a likely genetically-based climatic niche expansion of an annual plant invader, the common ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia L.), a highly allergenic invasive species causing substantial public health issues. To do so, we looked for recent evolutionary change at the upward migration front of its adventive range in the French Alps. Based on species climatic niche models estimated at both global and regional scales we stratified our sampling design to adequately capture the species niche, and localized populations suspected of niche expansion. Using a combination of species niche modeling, landscape genetics models and common garden measurements, we then related the species genetic structure and its phenotypic architecture across the climatic niche. Our results strongly suggest that the common ragweed is rapidly adapting to local climatic conditions at its invasion front and that it currently expands its niche toward colder and formerly unsuitable climates in the French Alps (i.e. in sites where niche models would not predict its occurrence). Such results, showing that species climatic niches can evolve on very short time scales, have important implications for predictive models of biological invasions that do not account for evolutionary processes.

Highlights

  • Biological invasions alter the structure of native communities and can disturb ecosystem functioning worldwide [1]

  • All 36 markers were excluded from the analysis of the neutral genetic structure

  • Our results indicate that A. artemisiifolia is likely adapting to novel climatic conditions, two main limitations remain in our approach: the measure of genetic variance in phenotypic traits and possibly confounding maternal or epigenetic effects

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Summary

Introduction

Biological invasions alter the structure of native communities and can disturb ecosystem functioning worldwide [1]. The ever-increasing spread of invasive species has stimulated an important body of research [2,3]. It notably becomes of increasing interest to understand how evolution shapes species' climatic niches, as it will shed light on the determinants of invasions.

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