Abstract
Genetic diversity is a fundamental component of biodiversity.
Examination of global patterns of genetic diversity can help highlight
mechanisms underlying species diversity, though patterns may differ
across the genome. Here, we compiled 6862 observations of genetic
diversity from 492 species of marine fish, assessed their associations
with macroecological drivers, and tested among hypotheses for diversity
gradients: the founder effect hypothesis, the kinetic energy hypothesis,
and the productivity-diversity hypothesis. We found that mitochondrial
genetic diversity followed geographic gradients similar to those of
species diversity, being highest near the equator, particularly in the
Coral Triangle, while nuclear genetic diversity did not follow clear
global patterns. Despite these differences, all genetic diversity
metrics were strongly correlated with chlorophyll-a concentration, while
mitochondrial diversity was also positively associated with sea surface
temperature. Our results provide support for the kinetic energy
hypothesis, which predicts that elevated mutation rates at higher
temperatures increase mitochondrial diversity, and the
productivity-diversity hypothesis, which posits that resource-rich
regions support larger populations with greater genetic diversity.
Overall, these findings reveal how environmental variables can influence
mutation rates and drift in the ocean, caution against using
mitochondrial macrogenetic patterns as proxies for nuclear DNA, and aid
in defining global gradients of genetic diversity.