Data from: Evolutionarily accelerated invasions: the rate of dispersal evolves upwards during the range advance of cane toads
Human activities are changing habitats and climates, and causing species' ranges to shift. Range expansion brings into play a set of powerful evolutionary forces at the expanding range edge that act to increase dispersal rates. One likely consequence of these forces is accelerating rates of ran...
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Zusammenfassung: | Human activities are changing habitats and climates, and causing
species' ranges to shift. Range expansion brings into play a set of
powerful evolutionary forces at the expanding range edge that act to
increase dispersal rates. One likely consequence of these forces is
accelerating rates of range advance due to evolved increases in dispersal
on the range edge. In northern Australia, cane toads have increased their
rate of spread five-fold in the last 70 years. Our breeding trials with
toads from populations spanning the species' invasion history in
Australia suggest a genetic basis to dispersal rates, and interpopulation
genetic variation in such rates. Toads whose parents were from the
expanding range front dispersed faster than toads whose parents were from
the core of the range. This difference reflects patterns found in their
field-collected mothers and fathers, and points to heritable variance in
the traits that have accelerated the toads' rate of invasion across
tropical Australia over recent decades. Taken together with demonstrated
spatial assortment by dispersal ability occurring on the expanding front,
these results point firmly to ongoing evolution as a driving force in the
accelerated expansion of toads across northern Australia. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.1873 |