Login / Signup

Global wind patterns shape genetic differentiation, asymmetric gene flow, and genetic diversity in trees.

Matthew M KlingDavid D Ackerly
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2021)
Wind disperses the pollen and seeds of many plants, but little is known about whether and how it shapes large-scale landscape genetic patterns. We address this question by a synthesis and reanalysis of genetic data from more than 1,900 populations of 97 tree and shrub species around the world, using a newly developed framework for modeling long-term landscape connectivity by wind currents. We show that wind shapes three independent aspects of landscape genetics in plants with wind pollination or seed dispersal: populations linked by stronger winds are more genetically similar, populations linked by directionally imbalanced winds exhibit asymmetric gene flow ratios, and downwind populations have higher genetic diversity. For each of these distinct hypotheses, partial correlations between the respective wind and genetic metrics (controlling for distance and climate) are positive for a significant majority of wind-dispersed or wind-pollinated genetic data sets and increase significantly across functional groups expected to be increasingly influenced by wind. Together, these results indicate that the geography of both wind strength and wind direction play important roles in shaping large-scale genetic patterns across the world's forests. These findings have implications for various aspects of basic plant ecology and evolution, as well as the response of biodiversity to future global change.
Keyphrases
  • genetic diversity
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • single cell
  • electronic health record
  • machine learning
  • functional connectivity
  • multiple sclerosis
  • resting state
  • artificial intelligence