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Chapter 23: The Evolution of Populations. Population Genetics. microevolution – change in genetic makeup of a population from generation to generation. macroevolution – evolutionary change above the species level.
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Population Genetics • microevolution – change in genetic makeup of a population from generation to generation
macroevolution – evolutionary change above the species level
population – group of individuals of the same species living in the same area
gene pool – all the genes in a given population at a given time
allele frequency – proportion of an allele in a gene pool • p = dominant allele • q = recessive allele f (p) = frequency of the dominant allele f (q) = frequency of the recessive allele
Hardy-Weinberg Theorem • helps measure changes in allele frequencies over time • provides an “ideal” population to use as a basis of comparison
Conditions for Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium: • Large population • No gene flow • No mutations • Random mating • No natural selection – hypothetical population that is not evolving – rarely met in nature
Mutation and sexual recombination only sources of new variations • mutation – changes in nucleotide sequence in DNA
sexual recombination – crossing over, shuffling of genes during meiosis
Genetic Drift – change in allele frequencies due to chance • usually in smaller populations • reduces genetic variation
bottleneck effect –when a population has been dramatically reduced, and the gene pool is no longer reflective of the original population’s
founder effect – when a small number of individuals colonize a new area; new gene pool not reflective of original population
gene flow – when a population gains or loses alleles • a movement of fertile individuals leaving/arriving • – a reduces differences between populations
quantitative characteristics – vary along a continuum, usually due to influence of two or more genes
average heterozygosity– measure of polymorphism in a population
geographic variation – difference in variation between population subgroups in different areas
Evolutionary Fitness • fitness – contribution an individual makes to the gene pool of the next generation, relative to the contributions of other individuals (the more offspring that you have that survive = more fit you are)
Types of selection • directional selection – shift toward a favorable variation
disruptive selection • – favors the extremes
stabilizing selection • – favors the mean
Heterozygous Advantage – when individuals heterozygous • Recessive allele is maintained in the population
Example: sickle-cell anemia prevelence of malaria sickle-cell disease
Sexual dimorphism – differences between the sexes in secondary sexual characteristics
Not necessarily better adaptations; example – mane on lion very hot, feathers on peacock very “expensive” to make
Common misconceptions: • Natural selection acts on phenotype, not genotype! • Natural selection does not create more perfect organisms! (what is perfect in one environment may not be perfect in another)