“…Similarly, selection on crop and wild traits varied significantly among crop‐wild hybrid Helianthus populations grown in Indiana and Nebraska (Baack et al, 2008). Although many studies have manipulated environmental conditions to measure early‐generation crop‐wild hybrid fitness (summarized in Campbell and Snow, 2007), perhaps the most extensive examination of this general phenomenon is reflected in our experiments of crop‐wild hybrid radish performance and fecundity that now span more than a decade (Campbell et al, 2006, 2009a,b, 2014, 2015, 2016a,b; Campbell and Snow, 2007; Pirimova et al, 2015; Teitel et al, 2016a,b). Typically, we find that hybrid populations germinate earlier, flower later, and grow to a larger size than wild plants; however, we did not have a priori expectations of how soil moisture may affect these patterns.…”