Marine species worldwide are responding to ocean warming by shifting their ranges to new latitudes and, for intertidal species, elevations. Demographic traits can vary across populations spanning latitudinal and elevational ranges, with impacts on population growth. Understanding how demography varies across gradients from range center to edge could help us predict future shifts, species assemblages, and extinction risks. We investigated demographic traits for 2 range-expanding whelk species:Acanthinucella spirataandMexacanthina lugubris.We measured reproductive output across environmental (latitudinal and shore elevation) gradients along the coast of California, USA. We also conducted intensive measurements of offspring condition (survival and thermal tolerance) across shore elevation forM. lugubrisat one site. We found no difference in reproductive output, body size, or larval survival across shore heights forM. lugubris,suggesting that egg-laying behavior buffers developing stages from the relatively high level of thermal variation experienced due to daily tidal emersion. However, across latitudes, reproductive output increased toward the leading range edge forA. spirata, and body size increased for both species. Increased vital rates at the leading range edge could increase whelk population growth and expansion, allowing species to persist under climate change even if contractions occur at trailing edges. 
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                    This content will become publicly available on April 1, 2026
                            
                            Small scale, elevation- and environmental-related differences in life history strategies in a temperate resident songbird
                        
                    
    
            Environmental drivers of within-population reproductive patterns are often hypothesized to lead to reproductive strategies tuned to local conditions. Organisms adjust energy allocation between survival and reproduction based on experience, age, lifespan and resource availability. Variation in these energetic investments can be described as different demographic tactics which are expected to optimize the fitness of local populations. These ideas are largely supported by both empirical and model-based studies but research identifying specific strategies and their corresponding environmental drivers within wild populations remains rare. Using 12 years of data, we investigated reproductive investment strategies in a relatively short-lived resident songbird, the mountain chickadee (Poecile gambeli), at two elevations that differ in environmental harshness in the North American Sierra Nevada mountains. Challenging winter environments at high elevations impose strong selection pressure on survival-related traits (e.g. specialized spatial cognition associated with food caching) and significantly shorten the length of the reproductive window. Here, we show that chickadees at a higher elevation lay smaller clutches (ca0.41 fewer eggs) and produce fewer (ca0.25 fewer nestlings) but larger offspring (ca0.4 g heavier) compared to lower elevation residents. Due to the harsher and less predictable environmental conditions at higher elevations, this investment strategy in this resident species likely leads to the production of offspring with greater chances of survival. Overall, our results show that within-species differences in life history strategies may evolve over a small spatial scale along strong environmental gradients. 
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                            - Award ID(s):
- 2119824
- PAR ID:
- 10586802
- Publisher / Repository:
- Royal Society
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Royal Society Open Science
- Volume:
- 12
- Issue:
- 4
- ISSN:
- 2054-5703
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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