Skip to main content
Living on the edge: ecological and evolutionary dynamics along invasion fronts

Living on the edge: ecological and evolutionary dynamics along invasion fronts

This is a Preprint and has not been peer reviewed. This is version 1 of this Preprint.

Add a Comment

You must log in to post a comment.


Comments

There are no comments or no comments have been made public for this article.

Downloads

Download Preprint

Authors

Phillip Joschka Haubrock, Neil Angelo Abreo, Stelios Katsanevakis Katsanevakis, Franz Essl, Ali Serhan Tarkan, Janeide Padilha, Philip E. Hulme, Danish A. Ahmed, António Barbosa Nogueira, Teun Everts, Cang Hui, Ronaldo Sousa, J. Robert Britton

Abstract

Invasion fronts are the edges of non-native species’ ranges and represent dynamic, non-equilibrium boundaries where colonization, ecological interactions, and rapid evolutionary processes converge. Although biological invasions are increasingly well studied, mechanisms operating at these advancing margins remain conceptually fragmented despite their disproportionate influence on spread dynamics, exerted impact, and management. Here, we synthesize how invasion-front geometries arise from interactions among propagule pressure, landscape permeability, long-distance dispersal, and environmental heterogeneity, producing continuous, fragmented, stratified, or coalescing fronts that shift with invasion stage and scale. We integrate ecological and evolutionary evidence to show how gradients from core to front include declining density, increased trait divergence, spatial sorting, serial founder effects, expansion load, and behavioural and physiological differentiation. We synthesise parallels with climate-driven range expansions of “neonative” species while emphasizing the stronger disequilibrium and novel biotic contexts characteristic of non-native fronts. Finally, we map these dynamics onto impact trajectories, demonstrating how trait-mediated interactions, resource reallocation, and system-level reconfiguration emerge sequentially along the invasion gradient. By unifying ecological and evolutionary processes across appropriate spatial and temporal scales, we establish invasion fronts as powerful, but understudied natural laboratories and critical leverage points for predicting, monitoring, and managing biological invasions.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.32942/X2ZD26

Subjects

Life Sciences

Keywords

range expansion, spatial sorting, eco-evolutionary dynamics, Invasive species

Dates

Published: 2025-12-18 01:48

Last Updated: 2025-12-18 01:48

License

CC-By Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

Additional Metadata

Conflict of interest statement:
None

Data and Code Availability Statement:
Not applicable

Language:
English