“…Song sparrows also vary predictably in traits widely recognized as adaptations to climatic variation in seasonality and primary production (Saether et al, 2016) including migratory, territorial, dispersal, and breeding behaviors, and demographic traits linked to fecundity, parental effort, and longevity (Arcese, 1989;Arcese et al, 2002;Germain & Arcese, 2014;Tarwater & Arcese, 2017;Reid & Arcese, 2020). Because many such traits have an additive genetic basis (e.g., Schluter & Smith, 1986;Wolak & Reid, 2016;Reid & Arcese, 2020), it is plausible that spatial variation in natural selection has contributed to heritable variation in migratory phenotype, as extensively described in European blackcaps (Sylvia atricapilla; e.g., Berthold, 1991;Berthold & Pulido, 1994;Delmore et al, 2020). If so, the pace of adaptation to climate warming in song sparrows might first be measured as the rate by which residency has become established in local populations known to have been migrants historically, and secondarily by estimating the rate of change in allele frequencies at functional loci (Rellstab et al, 2016;Capblancq et al, 2020).…”