Abstract
Evaluating the factors that drive patterns of population differentiation
in plants is critical for understanding several biological processes
such as local adaptation and incipient speciation. Previous studies have
given conflicting results regarding the significance of pollination
mode, seed dispersal mode, mating system, growth form, and latitudinal
region in shaping patterns of genetic structure, as estimated by
FST values, and no study to date has tested their
relative importance together across a broad scale. Here we assembled a
337-species dataset for seed plants from publications with data on
FST from nuclear markers and species traits, including
variables pertaining to the sampling scheme of each study. We used
species traits, while accounting for sampling variables, to perform
phylogenetic multiple regressions. Results demonstrated that
FST values were higher for tropical, mixed-mating,
non-woody species pollinated by small insects, indicating greater
population differentiation, and lower for temperate, outcrossing trees
pollinated by wind. Among the factors we tested, latitudinal region
explained the largest portion of variance, followed by pollination mode,
mating system and growth form, while seed dispersal mode did not
significantly relate to FST. Our analyses provide the
most robust and comprehensive evaluation to date of the main ecological
factors predicted to drive population differentiation in seed plants,
with important implications for understanding the basis of their genetic
divergence. Our study is the first that we are aware of to robustly
demonstrate greater population differentiation in tropical regions.