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 because of evolved increases in dispersal on the range edge. In northern Australia, cane toads have increased their rate of spread fivefold 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 who...
Invasive species often evolve rapidly following introduction despite genetic bottlenecks that may re...
Biological invasions can induce rapid evolutionary change. As cane toads (Rhinella marina) have spre...
Dispersal biology at an invasion front differs from that of populations within the range core, becau...
Human activities are changing habitats and climates, and causing species' ranges to shift. Range ex...
During a biological invasion, we expect that the expanding front will increasingly become dominated ...
Evolutionary theory predicts that individuals at an expanding range edge will disperse faster than c...
The process of biological invasion exposes a species to novel pressures, in terms of both the enviro...
Populations on the edge of an expanding range are subject to unique evolutionary pressures acting on...
Populations on the edge of an expanding range are subject to unique evolutionary pressures acting on...
The process of biological invasion exposes a species to novel pressures, in terms of both the enviro...
Invasions often accelerate through time, as dispersal-enhancing traits accumulate at the expanding r...
In invasive species, geographically variable evolutionary and ecological pressures can cause the rap...
Invasions often accelerate through time, as dispersal-enhancing traits accumulate at the expanding r...
To predict the spread of invasive species, we need to understand the mechanisms that underlie their ...
As a population expands into novel areas (as occurs in biological invasions), the range edge becomes...
Invasive species often evolve rapidly following introduction despite genetic bottlenecks that may re...
Biological invasions can induce rapid evolutionary change. As cane toads (Rhinella marina) have spre...
Dispersal biology at an invasion front differs from that of populations within the range core, becau...
Human activities are changing habitats and climates, and causing species' ranges to shift. Range ex...
During a biological invasion, we expect that the expanding front will increasingly become dominated ...
Evolutionary theory predicts that individuals at an expanding range edge will disperse faster than c...
The process of biological invasion exposes a species to novel pressures, in terms of both the enviro...
Populations on the edge of an expanding range are subject to unique evolutionary pressures acting on...
Populations on the edge of an expanding range are subject to unique evolutionary pressures acting on...
The process of biological invasion exposes a species to novel pressures, in terms of both the enviro...
Invasions often accelerate through time, as dispersal-enhancing traits accumulate at the expanding r...
In invasive species, geographically variable evolutionary and ecological pressures can cause the rap...
Invasions often accelerate through time, as dispersal-enhancing traits accumulate at the expanding r...
To predict the spread of invasive species, we need to understand the mechanisms that underlie their ...
As a population expands into novel areas (as occurs in biological invasions), the range edge becomes...
Invasive species often evolve rapidly following introduction despite genetic bottlenecks that may re...
Biological invasions can induce rapid evolutionary change. As cane toads (Rhinella marina) have spre...
Dispersal biology at an invasion front differs from that of populations within the range core, becau...