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Explore the impact of genetic variation on populations, microevolution, natural selection, and the influences of mutation, recombination, and drift. Witness how selective pressures shape phenotypic distributions over time.
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The Evolution of Populations Chapter 11
Genetic Variation in Populations • Microevolution - the observable change in the allele frequencies of a population over time. • Occurs on a small scale • In populations there are a wide range of phenotypes • Ex: short/fat penguins and taller/slim penguins
Genetic Variation in Populations • In order to have a wide range of phenotypes, there must be genetic variation • The greater the variation in phenotypes, the more likely it is that at least some individuals can survive in a changing environment
Genetic Variation in Populations • For example, a short/fat penguin might be better able to stay warm in an especially cold winter. A tall/slim penguin might be able to dive better, thus catching more fish in a period of food shortage
Genetic Variation in Populations • Gene pool - All of the alleles of every individual in a population
Genetic Variation in Populations • The allele frequency is a measure of how common a certain allele was in the population
Genetic Variation in Populations • To calculate allele frequency for “b”: • 7 b • 7 B • Total alleles = 14 • 7b/14 TOTAL = 50%
Mutations A random change in DNA Can form a new allele Mutations that occur in sex cells can be passed on to offspring Recombination Occurs during meiosis Parents’ alleles can be arranged in new ways during crossing over Genetic Variation - 2 Main Sources
How do we analyze genetic variation in a population? • With graphs!
Natural Selection in Populations • “mean” = average • “distribution” = range of data; a set of data and their frequency of occurrence
Natural Selection in Populations • Normal distribution/bell shaped curve • frequency is highest near the mean and decreases toward each extreme end of the range
Natural Selection in Populations • Phenotypes in the middle of the range are most common • Ex: people of average height (5-6ft) would fall in the shaded region • Anyone shorter or taller (the extremes) would fall outside the shaded region
Directional Selection • Directional selection - Favors a phenotype at one extreme of a trait’s range. • Causes a shift in the population’s phenotypic distribution • Extreme/rare phenotype becomes more common
Directional Selection • Ex: Peppered moth example • After the tree trunks became dark again, the trait for white bodies was selected against because it was no longer beneficial. This caused a shift in the distribution. The mean range now included mostly black moths.
Stabilizing Selection • Stabilizing Selection- The intermediate phenotype is favored and becomes most common in the population. • Distribution becomes stable in the middle range/decreases genetic variation
Stabilizing Selection • Ex: Human birth weight • Babies with either a very low or very high weight at birth are more likely to experience complications than babies of average weight
Disruptive Selection • Disruptive selection- Both extreme phenotypes are favored • Intermediate is selected against
Disruptive Selection • Ex: The African swallowtail butterfly has traits to be either orange, black (the extremes), or tan (the intermediate) • Predators don’t eat the orange or black ones because orange and black butterflies of different species are poisonous. Thus, the extreme trait is favored.
11.3 Notes • Gene Flow… • Organisms move to new population & reproduce --> its alleles are added to new population’s gene pool and removed from original one. • Increases genetic variation receiving of population • Lack of gene flow can lead to speciation
11.3 Notes • Genetic Drift • Small populations = more affected by chance • Elimination/sudden increase of alleles in a small population = drift • Drift = loss of genetic diversity
11.3 Notes • Bottleneck Effect • Drift that occurs after an event reduces population size • Reduced population size = reduced genetic variation
11.3 Notes • The Founder Effect • Small number of individuals colonize a new area • Gene pool of new colony is usually very different (less diverse) from original population
11.3 Notes • Effects of Drift • Loss of genetic variation • Less likely to have a large amount of individuals that can survive a changing environment • Higher chance of lethal genes being passed on instead of eliminated
11.3 Notes • Sexual Selection • Males continually produce sperm, small investment, can have many mates • Females have limited number of eggs, long gestational periods, invest more time/resources • Makes females choosy about mates
11.3 Notes • Sexual Selection • Certain traits increase mating success • Intra- : competition between males • Inter- : showy males to attract mates • Some showy traits can put animals in danger, but suggest good health/fertility/ability to care/defend to potential mates. GOOD QUALITY.
1/26/12 Bell Ringer! • What kind of sexual selection is feautured in this video? What traits might the beetle have to make him successful? • Sexual Selection of Darwin Beetles • What kind of sexual selection is featured in this video? Why are females so choosy about mates? • Sexual Selection Birds of Paradise
Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium • Describes populations that are not evolving • “Equilibrium” - Genotype frequencies in a population stay the SAME over time as long as 5 conditions are met.
5 Conditions • Very large population - no drift • No emigration/immigration - no gene flow • No mutations - no new alleles can be added to gene pool • Random mating - no sexual selection • No natural selection - all traits aid in survival equally
Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium • Equilibrium is only met if ALL 5 conditions are met!!!! • Real populations rarely meet all 5
Why study Hardy-Weinberg? • Biologists can compare real data to data predicted by the model. • Can learn more about the ways populations evolve and about how to test factors that can lead to evolution.
Review on what leads to evolution • Genetic drift • Gene flow • Mutation • Sexual selection • Natural selection
Speciation Through Isolation • Speciation - the rise of two or more new species from a previously existing species • Isolated populations - when gene flow stops • Isolated populations adapt to their environments differently, which can lead to differences in the gene pools
Speciation Through Isolation • Reproductive isolation - members of different populations can not mate successfully • Reproductive organs not compatible • Producing barren offspring • Final step of speciation
What causes isolation? • Behavioral isolation - differences in courtship or mating behaviors • Bird dances • Frog songs • Firefly flash patterns
What causes isolation? • Geographic isolation - Physical barriers that can separate populations • Mountain ranges • Rivers • Valleys
What causes isolation? • Geographic • Isthmus of Panama separated a large population of wrasse fish • Gene pools changed over time • Now 2 separate species
What causes isolation? • Temporal isolation - mating seasons do not line up • High competition for mates at one time
Evolution Through Natural Selection is Not Random • “Chance” and “random” relate to how easily an outcome can be predicted • Genetic drift • Mutations
Evolution Through Natural Selection is Not Random • Natural selection is NOT random • Natural selection pushes a population’s traits in an advantageous direction • The response of species to environmental challenges is not random
Patterns In Evolution • Convergent Evolution - evolution toward similar characteristics in unrelated species • Adaptations to similar environments
Patterns In Evolution • Shark and dolphin tails • Separated by 300 million years of evolution
Patterns In Evolution • Divergent Evolution - Closely related species evolve in different directions • Different appearances due to adapting to different environments
Patterns In Evolution • Red fox and Kit fox • Red coat, temperate region vs. Sandy coat/big ears, desert regions
Patterns In Evolution • Species interactions can lead to connected evolutionary pathways • Coevolution - process in which two or more species evolve in response to changes in each other
Patterns In Evolution • Acacia plant and stinging ant • Ant protects plant from predators and plant provides nectar for the ant
Patterns In Evolution • “Evolutionary Arms Race” - coevolution in competitive relationships
Patterns In Evolution • Garter snake and rough skinned newt • Newt produces a neurotoxin that concentrates on their skin • Garter snakes have evolved a resistance to the toxin • Driven newts to have extreme levels of toxins