Results/Conclusions Our experimental data reveal three important results. First, the environmental gradient determining the range limit of a species is spatially distinct from the edge of the population. We observed a central (“core”) component of the population in the favorable habitat and a peripheral component of the population extending well beyond the gradient to establish a variable population edge. Second, the population does not experience a sharp transition across the environmental gradient, but instead follows a smooth distribution from the population core, across the gradient, to the edge of the population. Third, variability ultimately determines the distance between the population edge and the environmental gradient. Individuals dispersing from the core are limited in how far they can disperse into the unfavorable habitat and therefore, limited in where they establish the population boundary. However, the severity of that limitation is determined endogenously by demography and dispersal which is intrinsically stochastic and, thus, produces a population boundary at variable distances from the environmental gradient. From these results we can conclude that inferring the quality of underlying habitat from the location of a species range edge is problematic.