Abstract

Although climate warming is expected to make habitat beyond species' current cold range edge suitable for future colonization, this new habitat may present an array of biotic or abiotic conditions not experienced within the current range. Species' ability to shift their range with climate change may therefore depend on how populations evolve in response to such novel environmental conditions. However, due to the recent nature of thus far observed range expansions, the role of rapid adaptation during climate change migration is only beginning to be understood. Here, we evaluated evolution during the recent native range expansion of the annual plant Dittrichia graveolens, which is spreading northward in Europe from the Mediterranean region. We examined genetically based differentiation between core and edge populations in their phenology, a trait that is likely under selection with shorter growing seasons and greater seasonality at northern latitudes. In parallel common garden experiments at range edges in Switzerland and the Netherlands, we grew plants from Dutch, Swiss, and central and southern French populations. Population genetic analysis following RAD-sequencing of these populations supported the hypothesized central France origins of the Swiss and Dutch range edge populations. We found that in both common gardens, northern plants flowered up to 4weeks earlier than southern plants. This differentiation in phenology extended from the core of the range to the Netherlands, a region only reached from central France over approximately the last 50years. Fitness decreased as plants flowered later, supporting the hypothesized benefits of earlier flowering at the range edge. Our results suggest that native range expanding populations can rapidly adapt to novel environmental conditions in the expanded range, potentially promoting their ability to spread.

Highlights

  • The redistribution of species in response to climate change (Chen, Hill, Ohlemüller, Roy, & Thomas, 2011; Parmesan, 2006) has focussed ecologists and evolutionary biologists on the processes determining population spread

  • Even if the northward range expansion of climate change migrants is set in motion by warming conditions (Parmesan & Yohe, 2003), continued expansion may require evolution in response to other environmental variables experienced in the expanded range

  • We found genetic variation in flowering time associated with latitude of origin, extending from the core of the range in southern France to the expanding northern range edge in the Netherlands

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Summary

Introduction

The redistribution of species in response to climate change (Chen, Hill, Ohlemüller, Roy, & Thomas, 2011; Parmesan, 2006) has focussed ecologists and evolutionary biologists on the processes determining population spread. A central unresolved question in the study of range expansion is whether evolutionary changes that occur in contemporary time facilitate the spread of range shifting populations and thereby contribute to persistence (Hoffmann & Sgrò, 2011; Urban et al, 2016). Forecasting species’ responses to climate change could benefit from a better understanding of the role of adaptive evolution during native range expansions (Urban et al, 2016). Even if the northward range expansion of climate change migrants is set in motion by warming conditions (Parmesan & Yohe, 2003), continued expansion may require evolution in response to other environmental variables experienced in the expanded range

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