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Creators/Authors contains: "Lehtinen, Richard_M"

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  1. ABSTRACT Cities impose unique selection pressures on wildlife and generate clines in phenotypic traits along urban–rural gradients. Roads are a widespread feature of human‐dominated landscapes and are known to cause direct wildlife mortality; however, whether they act as a selective force influencing phenotypic trait variation along urban–rural gradients remains unclear. This study tested the hypothesis that roads influence natural selection of coat color in the eastern gray squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis), a species with two distinct coat colors: a gray morph that is common in all areas and a melanic morph more prevalent in urban areas than in rural ones. Vehicular collisions are a significant cause of mortality in eastern gray squirrels, with the melanic morph more visually conspicuous on roads and more easily detected and avoided by drivers than the gray morph. Standardized road cruise surveys along an urbanization gradient in Syracuse, New York, USA, revealed that the prevalence of melanism among living squirrels in Syracuse was negatively related to distance from the city center, whereas there was no urban–rural cline in melanism among road‐killed individuals, with the melanic morph underrepresented among road‐killed squirrels by up to 30% along the urbanization gradient. An examination of the prevalence of each color morph on and off road surfaces in a range‐wide compilation of > 100,000 photographs ofS. carolinensisalso indicated that the melanic morph was underrepresented among road‐killed squirrels imaged. Our study highlights vehicular collisions as an important source of natural selection on phenotypic traits, suggesting a potential role in shaping patterns of urban evolution and contributing to the maintenance of urban–rural clines. 
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