The scale of local adaptation in Mimulus guttatus: Comparing life history races, ecotypes, and populations

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Abstract

Fitness trade-offs between environments are central to the evolution of biodiversity. Although transplant studies often document fitness trade-offs consistent with local adaptation (LA), many have also found an advantage of foreign genotypes (foreign advantage (FA)). Understanding the mechanisms driving the magnitude and distribution of fitness variation requires comparative approaches that test the ecological scales at which these different patterns emerge. We used a common garden transplant experiment to compare the relative fitnesses of native vs foreign genotypes at three nested ecological scales within Mimulus guttatus: annual vs perennial life history races, perennial ecotypes across an elevational range, and populations within perennial elevational ecotypes. We integrated fitness across the life-cycle and decomposed LA vs FA into contributions from different fitness components. We found LA, measured as home-site advantage, between annual and perennial races and a trend towards LA among populations within montane habitats. Conversely, we found strong FA of low-elevation perennials in a montane environment.

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Peterson, M. L., Kay, K. M., & Angert, A. L. (2016). The scale of local adaptation in Mimulus guttatus: Comparing life history races, ecotypes, and populations. New Phytologist, 211(1), 345–356. https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.13971

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