Evolution Unit
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Transcript Evolution Unit
Evolution
Unit
AP Biology
What is Evolution?
• Change in the genetic makeup of a population
over time.
• Fitness – those with favorable variations for
survival and reproduction.
– Populations can evolve, not individuals.
• Diverse gene pool good for long-term survival
of a species. Genetic variations are important!
• How do genetic variations occur?
Where does Variation come from?
Mutation
random changes to DNA
errors in mitosis & meiosis
environmental damage
Sexual reproduction
mixing of alleles
genetic recombination
new arrangements of alleles in every offspring
new combinations = new phenotypes
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Genetic variation in a population
Essence of Darwin’s ideas
Natural selection
heritable variation exists in populations
over-production of offspring
more offspring than the environment can support
competition
for food, mates, nesting sites, escape predators
differential survival
successful traits = adaptations
differential reproduction
adaptations become more
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common in population
Lamarckian vs. Darwinian view
LaMarck
in reaching higher
vegetation giraffes
stretch their necks &
transmits the acquired
longer neck to offspring
Darwin
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giraffes born with longer
necks survive better &
leave more offspring who
inherit their long necks
Natural Selection
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Major mechanism of evolution
Environment is always changing
Acts upon the phenotype of the population
Based on Darwin’s idea that resources are limited
and that there is competition for those resources.
• Adaptation = a genetic variation favored by
natural selection.
• When allele frequencies shift, speciation occurs
– Thus, the frequency change is NOT RANDOM
Effects of Selection
Changes in the average trait of a population
DIRECTIONAL
SELECTION
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giraffe neck
horse size
STABILIZING
SELECTION
DISRUPTIVE
SELECTION
human birth weight
rock pocket mice
Natural selection
in action
Resistance…
NOT immunity!
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MRSA
Heterozygote Advantage
Keeps the recessive
allele in the population
Ex: Sickle Cell Anemia
aa – dies of sickle cell
anemia
Aa – some side affects
BUT resistant to malaria!
AA – no disease present
BUT prone to malaria
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Hidden variations can be exposed through selection!
Terminal
bud
Lateral
buds
Cabbage
Artificial selection
Brussels
sprouts
Leaves
Flower cluster
Kale
Cauliflower
Stem
Flower
and
stems
Broccoli
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Wild mustard
Kohlrabi
In addition to natural
selection, evolutionary
change is also driven
by random processes…
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Genetic Drift
Chance events changing frequency of
traits in a population
not adaptation to environmental conditions
not selection
founder effect
small group splinters off & starts a new colony
it’s random who joins the group
bottleneck
a disaster reduces population to
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small number & then population
recovers & expands again but
from a limited gene pool
who survives disaster may be random
Ex: Cheetahs
All cheetahs share a small number of alleles
less than 1% diversity
2 bottlenecks
10,000 years ago
Ice Age
last 100 years
poaching & loss of habitat
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Conservation issues
Bottlenecking is an important
Peregrine Falcon
concept in conservation
biology of endangered
species
loss of alleles from gene pool
reduces variation
reduces adaptability
Breeding programs must
consciously
outcross
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Golden Lion
Tamarin
Human Impact on variation
How do we affect variation in other
populations?
Artificial selection/Inbreeding
Animal breeds
Loss of genetic diversity
Insecticide usage
Overuse of antibiotics
resistant bacterial strains
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