Adaptive divergence is the key evolutionary process generating biodiversity by means of natural selection. Yet, the conditions under which it can arise in the presence of gene flow remain contentious. To address this question, we subjected 132 sexually reproducing fission yeast populations, sourced from two independent genetic backgrounds, to disruptive ecological selection and manipulated the level of migration between environments. Contrary to theoretical expectations, adaptive divergence was most pronounced when migration was either absent (allopatry) or maximal (sympatry), but was much reduced at intermediate rates (parapatry and local mating). This effect was apparent across central life-history components (survival, asexual growth and...
Evolutionary convergence is a core issue in the study of adaptive evolution, as well as a highly deb...
Abstract Background Theory and artificial selection e...
Rapid phenotypic diversification during biological invasions can either arise by adaptation to alter...
How adaptation and population differentiation occur is fundamental to understand the origin of biodi...
Experimental evolution is a powerful tool to understand the adaptive potential of populations under ...
Abstract Adaptation often proceeds from standing variation, and natural selection acting on pairs of...
Under natural or sexual selection, individuals with advantageous traits or combinations of traits wi...
Habitat preference may promote adaptive divergence and speciation, yet the conditions under which th...
The potential for evolutionary change is limited by the availability of genetic variation. Mutations...
Although divergent natural selection is common in nature, the extent to which genetic constraints bi...
Evolutionary branching occurs when frequency-dependent selection splits a phenotypically monomorphic...
One of the most challenging issues in evolutionary biology is the synthesis of population-level dyna...
Organisms commonly experience significant spatiotemporal variation in their environments. In respons...
SummaryAssortative mating, when individuals of similar phenotypes mate, likely plays a key role in p...
What processes contribute to the origin and maintenance of biological diversity? When populations oc...
Evolutionary convergence is a core issue in the study of adaptive evolution, as well as a highly deb...
Abstract Background Theory and artificial selection e...
Rapid phenotypic diversification during biological invasions can either arise by adaptation to alter...
How adaptation and population differentiation occur is fundamental to understand the origin of biodi...
Experimental evolution is a powerful tool to understand the adaptive potential of populations under ...
Abstract Adaptation often proceeds from standing variation, and natural selection acting on pairs of...
Under natural or sexual selection, individuals with advantageous traits or combinations of traits wi...
Habitat preference may promote adaptive divergence and speciation, yet the conditions under which th...
The potential for evolutionary change is limited by the availability of genetic variation. Mutations...
Although divergent natural selection is common in nature, the extent to which genetic constraints bi...
Evolutionary branching occurs when frequency-dependent selection splits a phenotypically monomorphic...
One of the most challenging issues in evolutionary biology is the synthesis of population-level dyna...
Organisms commonly experience significant spatiotemporal variation in their environments. In respons...
SummaryAssortative mating, when individuals of similar phenotypes mate, likely plays a key role in p...
What processes contribute to the origin and maintenance of biological diversity? When populations oc...
Evolutionary convergence is a core issue in the study of adaptive evolution, as well as a highly deb...
Abstract Background Theory and artificial selection e...
Rapid phenotypic diversification during biological invasions can either arise by adaptation to alter...