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      PHENOTYPIC DIFFERENTIATION AT SOUTHERN LIMIT BORDERS: THE CASE STUDY OF TWO FUCOID MACROALGAL SPECIES WITH DIFFERENT LIFE-HISTORY TRAITS1 : PHENOTYPIC DIFFERENTIATION AT SOUTHERN LIMIT BORDERS

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      Journal of Phycology
      Wiley

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          On the Relationship between Abundance and Distribution of Species

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            Limits to evolution at range margins: when and why does adaptation fail?

            What stops populations expanding into new territory beyond the edge of a range margin? Recent models addressing this problem have brought together population genetics and population ecology, and some have included interactions among species at range edges. Here, we review these models of adaptation at environmental or parapatric margins, and discuss the contrasting effects of migration in either swamping local adaptation, or supplying the genetic variation that is necessary for adaptation to continue. We illustrate how studying adaptation at range margins (both with and without hybridization) can provide insight into the genetic and ecological factors that limit evolution more generally, especially in response to current rates of environmental change.
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              Geographic range limits: achieving synthesis.

              Understanding of the determinants of species' geographic range limits remains poorly integrated. In part, this is because of the diversity of perspectives on the issue, and because empirical studies have lagged substantially behind developments in theory. Here, I provide a broad overview, drawing together many of the disparate threads, considering, in turn, how influences on the terms of a simple single-population equation can determine range limits. There is theoretical and empirical evidence for systematic changes towards range limits under some circumstances in each of the demographic parameters. However, under other circumstances, no such changes may take place in particular parameters, or they may occur in a different direction, with limitation still occurring. This suggests that (i) little about range limitation can categorically be inferred from many empirical studies, which document change in only one demographic parameter, (ii) there is a need for studies that document variation in all of the parameters, and (iii) in agreement with theoretical evidence that range limits can be formed in the presence or absence of hard boundaries, environmental gradients or biotic interactions, there may be few general patterns as to the determinants of these limits, with most claimed generalities at least having many exceptions.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Phycology
                Wiley
                00223646
                June 2011
                June 2011
                April 25 2011
                : 47
                : 3
                : 451-462
                Article
                10.1111/j.1529-8817.2011.00986.x
                ce3f549d-d833-4935-ab19-4a8a1e92510b
                © 2011

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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