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Wind Direction and Strength Determine the Genetic Structure of an Insect-Pollinated Plant Across Heterogeneous Landscape

  • Jun Yin Deng
  • , Rong Hua Fu
  • , Stephen G. Compton
  • , Chuan Yuan
  • , Matthew M. Kling
  • , Xiao Yong Chen
  • , Yao Bin Song
  • , Kai Jiang
  • , Mei Liu
  • , Jaco M. Greeff*
  • , Yan Chen*
  • *此作品的通讯作者
  • Mianyang Normal University
  • Hangzhou Normal University
  • University of Leeds
  • University of Vermont
  • Shanghai Chenshan Botanical Garden
  • University of Pretoria

科研成果: 期刊稿件文章同行评审

摘要

Aim: Dispersal of plant propagules and their genes is crucial for plant responses to landscape heterogeneities, yet the mechanisms behind this dispersal remain unclear. Ficus species depend on wind-borne fig wasps for pollination, but research on airflow effects on Ficus genetic structure has produced conflicting results. Our study aims to clarify the role of wind in shaping the genetic structure of such plants with wind-borne insect pollinators by examining how geomorphological complexity interacts with air movements to influence genetic structures. Location: Southwest China: Sichuan, Yunnan, Guangxi and Guizhou provinces. Taxon: Ficus tikoua Bur., Ficus, Moraceae. Methods: We sampled 56 F. tikoua sites across southwest China, characterised by high geomorphologic complexity. River basins and predominant winds were visualised across the sampled regions. Wind connectivity between sampled sites during the main pollination season was modelled based on hourly daily wind data. The maternal and biparental genetic structure of sites were reconstructed using chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) and nuclear SSR (nuSSR) markers. Links between genetic structure, location, and wind parameters were estimated by Mantel or partial Mantel tests. Results: The plant's maternal genetic structure was defined by river systems, with two distinct cpDNA groups located in the Yangtze and Pearl River basins, respectively. The boundaries for nuclear variation were less clearly delimited geographically. Sites with mixtures of nuSSR groups were concentrated where prevailing winds arrived from several directions. Stronger between-site air flows increased nuSSR geneflow and genetic similarities, while populations receiving more wind flow were also more genetically variable. Main Conclusions: Our study reveals how plant gene dispersal reflects air and water movements that in turn respond to geomorphologic complexity, thereby directly demonstrating the effects of wind on gene flow of plants with wind-borne insect pollinators. Wind data matching pollinator flight times and large sample sizes are crucial for testing wind effects.

源语言英语
文章编号e15119
期刊Journal of Biogeography
52
6
DOI
出版状态已出版 - 6月 2025

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