1 / 11

Population Genetics

Population Genetics. Hardy-Weinberg and More. Variation of Traits in a Population. Bell Curve Extremes at each end Causes of Variation Environment and heredity Mutation Recombination Random fusion of gametes. Allele frequencies and Gene Pool.

lauren
Download Presentation

Population Genetics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Population Genetics Hardy-Weinberg and More

  2. Variation of Traits in a Population • Bell Curve • Extremes at each end • Causes of Variation • Environment and heredity • Mutation • Recombination • Random fusion of gametes

  3. Allele frequencies and Gene Pool • Total genetic information available in population • Allele frequency is determined by dividing number of certain allele by total number of alleles. • P + Q = 1 • P = number of recessive/total number of alleles • Q =number of dominant/total number of alleles • Predicting Phenotypes • Phenotype frequency • Equal to the number of individuals with particular phenotype divided by the total number of individuals in the population. • Same principle as allele frequencies • P2 + 2PQ + Q2 = 1

  4. Hardy Weinberg Equilibrium • Allele frequencies in a population remain the same from generation to generation unless acted on by outside influences. • Assumptions about an ideal “made up” population that is not evolving • No net mutations occur • Individuals neither enter nor leave the population. • The population is large • Individuals mate randomly. • Natural Selection does not occur.

  5. What is Microevolution?

  6. What is Microevolution? • A change in the gene frequency of a population • Can be seen over short periods of time • One generation to the next • For example, the frequency of a gene for pesticide resistance in a population of crop pests increases • There can be many reasons for microevolution

  7. Disruption of Genetic Equilibrium • Mutation • Can produce totally new alleles for a trait • Most are harmful but the beneficial ones are important for evolution • Migration • Immigration: Movement of individuals into a population • Emigration: Movement of individuals out a population • This is gene flow, the process of genes moving from one population to another

  8. Disruption of Genetic Equilibrium • Genetic Drift • Allele frequencies change as a result of random events or chance • Small populations • a) Founders effect • b) Bottle neck • Non-Random Mating • Many species do not mate randomly • Based on geographic proximity and similar physical characteristic

  9. Disruption of Genetic Equilibrium

  10. Disruption of Genetic Equilibrium • Natural Selection • Stabilizing selection • Individuals with average form of trait have highest fitness • Extreme forms have lower fitness • Directional selection • One extreme form has greater fitness then average • Disruptive Selection • Either extreme have greater fitness

  11. Disruption of Genetic Equilibrium • Sexual Selection • Colors • Females choose males based on certain traits • Extreme traits give female indication of quality of males genes

More Related