Post on 24-Feb-2016
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Evolution: it’s all about mutations that aid survival
and reproductive selection
Natural selection…
is the process by which those ______________that make it more likely for an ______________ to survive and successfully ______________ become more common in a ______________ over successive generations. It is a key mechanism of ______________.
Natural selection…
is the process by which those heritable traits that make it more likely for an organism to survive and successfully reproduce become more common in a population over successive generations. It is a key mechanism of evolution.
Let’s start out with the gene pool
• The gene pool is the combined genetic info of all the members of a population
• The gene pool can consider all of the traits of the population, or just one of the traits.
Let’s try looking at our gene pool…
Some traits in the gene pool are easier to study than others:
• The # of phenotypes of a given trait indicate the # of genes controlling that trait– How many genes
control this trait?
Some traits in the gene pool are easier to study than others:
• The # of phenotypes of a given trait indicate the # of genes controlling that trait– How many genes
control this trait?1, it is a single gene trait
Polygenic traits are represented by a bell-shaped curve
How and why does the gene pool change?
The two main sources of genetic variation:1. Mutations2. Gene shuffling, that results from sexual
reproduction during meiosis
Natural Selection on polygenic traits can happen in 3 basic patterns.
Which areas on the map have the highest fitness? The highest mortality/selection pressure?
• Which graphs of natural selection best relate to Darwin’s tortoises? Finches?
Genetic drift:Random change/event affects allele frequencyin a population
Founder effect…can result in genetic drift, when a sub-population
becomes isolated. What is an example?
More genetic drift
Evolution vs. genetic equilibrium
5 factors must exist to maintain genetic equilibrium from generation to generation
1. Random mating2. The population must be very large3. No movement into or out of the population 4. No mutations5. No natural selection
The Hardy-Weinberg principle states that allele frequency in a population will remain constant unless one or more of these factors cause change
Hardy-Weinberg and genetic equilibrium explained mathematically
Early in the twentieth century mathematician Godfrey Hardy and physician Wilhelm Weinberg independently developed a model describing the relationship between the frequency of the dominant and recessive alleles (hereafter, p and q ) in a population.
p 2 + 2 pq + q 2
They reasoned that the combined frequencies of p and q must equal 1, since together they represent all the alleles for that trait in the population:
Hardy and Weinberg represented random mating in the population as the product (p + q)(p + q), which can be expanded to p 2 + 2 pq + q 2 .
This corresponds to the biological fact that, as a result of mating, some new individuals have two p alleles, some one p and one q, and some two q alleles.
P 2 then represents the fraction of the population that is homozygous dominant while 2 pq and q 2 represent the heterozygous and homozygous recessive fractions, respectively.
How do new species come to be?
Speciation
1. Founders arrive
Speciation
1. Founders arrive2. Isolation of populations
a. Geographicb. Behavioralc. Temporal
Speciation
1. Founders arrive2. Isolation of populations
a. Geographicb. Behavioralc. Temporal
3. Changes in gene poola. Shufflingb. Mutations
Speciation
1. Founders arrive2. Isolation of populations
a. Geographicb. Behavioralc. Temporal
3. Changes in gene poola. Shufflingb. Mutations
4. Become reproductively different
Speciation
1. Founders arrive2. Isolation of populations
a. Geographicb. Behavioralc. Temporal
3. Changes in gene poola. Shufflingb. Mutations
4. Become reproductively different5. Continued evolution
• Speciation video (Crash Course in Biology)• Natural selection in action (U. of Colorado)