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      Ecological and evolutionary processes at expanding range margins.

      Nature
      Animals, Biological Evolution, Butterflies, physiology, Climate, Ecology, England, Environment, Gryllidae, Population Dynamics

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          Abstract

          Many animals are regarded as relatively sedentary and specialized in marginal parts of their geographical distributions. They are expected to be slow at colonizing new habitats. Despite this, the cool margins of many species' distributions have expanded rapidly in association with recent climate warming. We examined four insect species that have expanded their geographical ranges in Britain over the past 20 years. Here we report that two butterfly species have increased the variety of habitat types that they can colonize, and that two bush cricket species show increased fractions of longer-winged (dispersive) individuals in recently founded populations. Both ecological and evolutionary processes are probably responsible for these changes. Increased habitat breadth and dispersal tendencies have resulted in about 3- to 15-fold increases in expansion rates, allowing these insects to cross habitat disjunctions that would have represented major or complete barriers to dispersal before the expansions started. The emergence of dispersive phenotypes will increase the speed at which species invade new environments, and probably underlies the responses of many species to both past and future climate change.

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          Most cited references19

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          Poleward shifts in geographical ranges of butterfly species associated with regional warming

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            Biological consequences of global warming: is the signal already apparent?

            Increasing greenhouse gas concentrations are expected to have significant impacts on the world's climate on a timescale of decades to centuries. Evidence from long-term monitoring studies is now accumulating and suggests that the climate of the past few decades is anomalous compared with past climate variation, and that recent climatic and atmospheric trends are already affecting species physiology, distribution and phenology.
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              A Practical Model of Metapopulation Dynamics

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                11385570
                10.1038/35079066

                Chemistry
                Animals,Biological Evolution,Butterflies,physiology,Climate,Ecology,England,Environment,Gryllidae,Population Dynamics

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