Premise Of The Study: The Cape Floristic Region (CFR) of South Africa is renowned for its botanical diversity, but the evolutionary origins of this diversity remain controversial. Both neutral and adaptive processes have been implicated in driving diversification, but population-level studies of plants in the CFR are rare. Here, we investigate the limits to gene flow and potential environmental drivers of selection in L. (Proteaceae L.), a widespread CFR species.
Methods: We sampled 19 populations across the range of and used genotyping by sequencing to identify 2066 polymorphic loci in 663 individuals. We used a Bayesian outlier analysis to identify single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) marking genomic regions that may be under selection; we used those SNPs to identify potential drivers of selection and excluded them from analyses of gene flow and genetic structure.
Results: A pattern of isolation by distance suggested limited gene flow between nearby populations. The populations of fell naturally into two or three groupings, which corresponded to an east-west split. Differences in rainfall seasonality contributed to diversification in highly divergent loci, as do barriers to gene flow that have been identified in other species.
Conclusions: The strong pattern of isolation by distance is in contrast to the findings in the only other widespread species in the CFR that has been similarly studied, while the effects of rainfall seasonality are consistent with well-known patterns. Assessing the generality of these results will require investigations of other CFR species.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3732/ajb.1600232 | DOI Listing |
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