Chapter 23: The Evolution of Populations
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Transcript Chapter 23: The Evolution of Populations
Chapter 23: The Evolution of
Populations
Evolution
Scientific theory
Supported
by all current evidence
New information added
ex. Natural selection no longer only mechanism
Microevolution
Change in population’s genetics over
generations
Mendel’s research made sense of natural
selection
Population genetics
how populations change genetically over
time
Combines Darwin & Mendel
Population- localized interbreeding individuals
that produce fertile offspring
Gene pool- all alleles for all individuals in the
population
Modern synthesis
Theory of evolution integrating statistics,
genetics, biogeography, paleontology,
botany, etc.
Major factors for evolutionary
change
Natural selection
Differential success based on suitable environmental
trait
Acts on individuals evolutionary impact seen
in populations
Genetic drift
Chance fluctuations in allele frequencies
Bottleneck effect
Founder effect
Survivors after a catastrophic event pass on only possible
alleles
Isolated individuals establish a new gene pool
Gene flow
Population gains/loses alleles through
immigration/emigration
Heritable variations which may lead
to evolution
Mutation
Point mutations (ex. Sickle cell allele, HIV resistance)
Alteration in gene number or sequence
Translocation
duplication
Sexual recombination
Gene shuffling by meiosis & fertilization
Variation may aid in disease resistance/co-evolution
with another species
Closer look at variation
Phenotypic polymorphism
Genetic polymorphism
Discrete characters= “either or traits” ex. Blue or
brown eyes
Quantitative characters= traits on a continuum ex.
height
Geographic variations
Environment can cause one allele to be
beneficial in one locale but a different allele to
be beneficial in another locale
Preservation of genetic variation
Unfavorable variations are not eliminated
completely due to:
Diploidy
Balancing selection
Heterozygote advantage
Frequency dependant selection
Neutral variation
Sexual selection
Intrasexual selection
Intersexual selection
A closer look at Natural selection
Fitness
Contribution an individual makes to the gene pool
relative to others
Fitness acts on phenotypes (not genotypes)
with the environment & reproductive success
playing key roles
Types:
Directional
Disruptive
Shift in phenotypes toward one extreme ex. Giraffe neck
length
Intermediate has low fitness ex. Barn swallow tail length
Stabilizing
Intermediate phenotype has high fitness ex. Birth weight
Natural selection can not create
perfect organisms
Evolution can not scrap ancestral anatomy
Adaptations are often compromises
Chance & natural selection interact
Selection can only edit existing variations
Hardy-Weinberg Theorem
Determines when evolution is not
occurring; alleles are constant in the gene
pool
Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium
Alleles retain the same frequency across
generations
p=frequency of one allele for a locus in the
gene pool
q=frequency of second allele for a locus in
the gene pool
Equilibrium equation
p2 +2pq=q2 = 1
Conditions for H-W equilibrium
large population
No gene flow
No mutations
Random mating
No natural selection
Natural populations are rarely in true
H-W equilibrium but rate of evolution
may be so slow it appears to be close
to equilibrium
Ex. PKU allele