@article{RDM,
      recid = {14601},
      author = {Carley, Lauren N. and Geber, Monica A. and Morris, William  F. and Eckhart, Vincent M. and Moeller, David A.},
      title = {Data from: Local adaptation is highest in populations with  stable long-term growth},
      publisher = {Dryad},
      address = {2025-01-06},
      number = {RDM},
      abstract = {Theory suggests that the drivers of demographic variation  and local adaptation are shared and may feedback on one  other. Despite some evidence for these links in controlled  settings, the relationship between local adaptation and  demography remains largely unexplored in natural  conditions. Using 10 years of demographic data and two  reciprocal transplant experiments, we tested predictions  about the relationship between the magnitude of local  adaptation and demographic variation (population growth  rates and their elasticities to vital rates) across 10  populations of a well-studied annual plant. In both years,  we found a strong unimodal relationship between mean  home-away local adaptation and stochastic population growth  rates. Other predicted links were either weakly or not  supported by our data. Our results suggest that declining  and rapidly growing populations exhibit reduced local  adaptation, potentially due to maladaptation and relaxed  selection, respectively.},
      url = {http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/14601},
}