RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 The effects of environmental heterogeneity within cities on the evolution of clines JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 2022.04.06.487365 DO 10.1101/2022.04.06.487365 A1 James S. Santangelo A1 Cindy Roux A1 Marc T. J. Johnson YR 2022 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2022/04/10/2022.04.06.487365.abstract AB There is increasing evidence that environmental change associated with urbanization can drive rapid adaptation. However, most studies of urban adaptation have focused on coarse urban vs. rural comparisons or sampled along a single urban-rural environmental gradients, thereby ignoring the role that within-city environmental heterogeneity might play in adaptation to urban environments.In this study, we examined fine-scale variation in the presence of HCN—a potent anti-herbivore defense—and its two underlying genes (Ac and Li) between park green spaces and surrounding suburban habitats for five city parks in the Greater Toronto Area.We show that fine-scale urbanization has driven the formation of micro-clines in HCN on a scale of < 2 km, though the presence and strength of micro-clines varied across parks. Interestingly, these micro-clines were in the opposite direction to that predicted based on previously described patterns of HCN frequency change along urban-rural gradients.Synthesis: These results suggest larger scale, adaptive urban-rural clines occur across a complex matrix of environmental heterogeneity within cities that drives fine-scale adaptive microclines of varying strengths and directions.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.