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Intro. to Evolution I: Chapter 16 Population Genetics. How do we get new species?. Breeders have been affecting plant and animal populations for centuries through artificial selection. Genetic variation in populations allows breeders to change gene pools.
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How do we get new species? • Breeders have been affecting plant and animal populations for centuries through artificial selection. • Genetic variation in populations allows breeders to change gene pools. • Also allows populations to adapt to environmental changes
Microevolution in Large Populations • Natural selection is one of the most important factors that change gene pools. • English peppered moth: • Nearly all had light-colored wings in 1850. • By 1900, almost all had dark wings. How could this have happened? • Natural selection changed the frequencies in the gene pool and helped the population adapt to its changed environment.
Sickle-cell Allele Frequency • Hemoglobin is the protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen throughout the body • A difference in one amino-acid results in the sickle-cell allele • When homozygous, causes problems with delivery of oxygen to tissues • Tend to be anemic
In regions of Africa, sickle-cell allele frequency is as high as 20%. • Geneticist J. B. S. Haldane noticed most frequent in areas with high malaria rates • Haldane hypothesized that the sickle-cell allele was advantageous in certain environments because it protected against malaria • He was right! • Natural selection favors heterozygote malaria resistant and only slightly anemic
Mechanisms that Affect Gene Pools • Natural selection: Increased reproductive success leads to increased allele frequency; poor reproductive success leads to decreased allele frequency • Main factor that changes the gene pools of large populations
Genetic drift: Random changes in small populations • Gene flow: Change in the gene pool resulting from migration of individuals between populations • Can introduce new alleles or change allele frequencies • Can make gene pools similar between geographically separated populations • Mutation: Direct conversion of one allele to another • Often bad or no effect • Sometimes beneficial and favored by natural selection
Microevolution in Small Populations • Same factors affecting large populations also act on small populations • Genetic drift has a substantial impact on small populations, but little effect on large populations • In small populations, the allele frequencies jump around, changing randomly from generation to generation
Sometimes a small number of migrants starts a new population • Ex. Darwin’s finches came from S. American mainland • Only a few migrants on islands without any other finches start new population • Gene pools sometimes very different from mainland populations just by chance
Genetic drift that influences new populations is called the founder effect • A new population can have allele frequencies that are very different from its source population if the number of organisms that establish the new gene pool is small
Inbreeding • Genetic drift reduces the frequency of heterozygotes over time • Inbreeding is the gradual increase in homozygosity caused by genetic drift in small populations • This can occur in large populations, too, if there is a population bottleneck • Number of organisms drastically reduced for a few generations
Inbreeding cont. • Inbreeding can have negative effects on populations • Most gene pools have recessive alleles that are harmless as single copies • Inbreeding increases the frequency of harmful and lethal alleles • Increased homozygosity of these alleles cause inbred populations to suffer from inbreeding depression • Fertility and survival are reduced compared to populations that are not inbred
Think About It! What are some of the ways that a loss of genetic variation could prove problematic for a population?