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Other Factors Can Affect Genetic Variation In A Population. Natural Selection drives the evolution (change in genetic material) of a population Other factors can cause changes in the genetic material (gene pool) of a population Mutation Migration Assortative (nonrandom) mating Genetic Drift.
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Other Factors Can Affect Genetic Variation In A Population • Natural Selection drives the evolution (change in genetic material) of a population • Other factors can cause changes in the genetic material (gene pool) of a population • Mutation • Migration • Assortative (nonrandom) mating • Genetic Drift
Genetic Drift • Change In Allele Frequency Caused By Random Chance • Random chance = natural disasters, disease, etc. • Has a greater affect on small populations • Often causes reduction in alleles present in the gene pool.
The Bottleneck Affect • A direct result of genetic drift • As a result of some random event, several alleles are lost from a population.
Stabilizing Selection Directional Selection Disruptive Selection Nature selects the average form of a trait (human baby size) Nature selects one extreme form of a trait (e.g. only the very long tongue in anteaters, not the short tongue) Nature selects both the extreme forms of a trait (e.g. very bright shell and very dull shell) 3 General Types of Natural Selection
The 3 Types of Natural Selection Disruptive Selection Stabilizing Selection Directional Selection
Sexual Selection: A Special Type of Directional Selection • Individuals of one sex (usually males) of a species are more likely to get picked as partners by the other sex if their characteristics are bolder, brighter, louder or stronger than other members of the same sex.
Of Course, Being More Noticeable Does Have Its Disadvantages . . .
Before We Go On, An Important Question: What is a species? • Members of a species are morphologically (physically) similar, and can successfully interbreed (produce fertile offspring).
How Do New Species Form? • Isolation • Isolating Mechanisms • Prezygotic Isolation • Postzygotic Isolation
Geographic Isolation • Physical separation of members of a population (by formation of a canyon, mountain, river, etc.) • Leads to different adaptations on each side of barrier, and eventually new species
Geographic Isolation = New Species: An Example 2 Species of Squirrels Formed When They Were Separated By The Grand Canyon
Reproductive Isolation • Species isolated because they reproduce in different seasons or times of day
Behavioral Isolation • Species Differ In Their Mating Rituals (e.g. different bird songs, mating colors, dances, pheromones, etc.)
Ecological Isolation • Ecological Isolation • Species inhabit the same area, but different habitats, so they don’t encounter each other
Mechanical • Mechanical Isolation • Body structure prevents mating • In layman’s terms - the parts don’t fit • Famous quote in AP Bio class at PHS • “You mean it’s like trying to park a cadillac in an outhouse?”
Reproductive Isolation • Some barriers to successful breeding arise after fertilization and are called postzygotic isolating mechanisms • Sterile offspring (e.g. Horse + Donkey = Mule)
How quickly do new species form? • 2 hypotheses • Gradualism • Many transitional forms between common ancestor and modern organisms • Punctuated Equilibrium • Sudden shifts in form from an ancestor to newer organism, so not many transitional forms between common ancestor and modern organisms
Patterns of Evolution • Convergent Evolution • Divergent Evolution • Adaptive Radiation • Artificial Selection • Coevolution
Convergent Evolution • Organisms appear similar, but aren’t closely related • Why? • Similar environment selects for similar traits
Divergent Evolution • Related populations or species become less and less alike Adaptive Radiation
A Second Type Of Divergent Evolution • Artificial Selection • Humans, rather than nature, select traits
Coevolution • Two or more species in close association w/one another change together • Predator/Prey • Parasite/Host • Plant/Pollinator