Transcript population
A history of life and natural
selection
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Evidence for
Evolution
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Fossils
A fossil is the remains or traces of an organism that died
long ago
Many of the oldest fossils we find are of extinct species
Most fossils are found in sedimentary rocks that settle at
the bottom of seas, lakes and marshes
All the fossils together have created a geologic record of
Earth’s history
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Fossils
Fossils show us different
organisms lived at different times
For example, rock strata from
about 2-3 bya would show
fossils of only single celled
organism
However, rock strata from 150
mya would show fossils of
dinosaurs, the first birds, and a
wide variety of plant life
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Fossils
If evolution has occurred, we would see
different species throughout history
Fossils show us that there has been!!
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Fossils
Fossils also give us clues to
transitional species.
Transitional species show
how organisms gradually
change over time
For example, scientists
believe the whale ancestor’s
were once land dwelling
We have found several
transitional fossils to
support this idea
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Anatomy
Anatomy is the study of
the body structure
If organisms have
evolved from common
ancestors, then they
would have similar
anatomical
features…RIGHT?!?!?!
Well, THEY DO!
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Anatomy
Some organisms have homologous structures,
which are anatomical structures that occur in
different species and that originated by heredity
from a common ancestor
The function of that structure may differ in
related organisms
Finding homologous structures in different
species indicates they have a common ancestor
Ex: Limb bones in mammals
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Homologous Structures
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Anatomy
Some organisms have analogous structures, which are
anatomical structures that have closely related functions,
but were not derived from the same ancestor
Analogous structures evolve independently, but have the
same function
EX: wings in bats, birds, and bugs
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Anatomy
Many organisms display vestigial
structures, which are anatomical structures
that seem to have no function but resemble
structures used in ancestors
Remember, that just because something
becomes useless, DOES NOT mean it goes
away…it must become detrimental to
survival
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Vestigial structures
Eyes on a mole
Hip bones on a whale or snake
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Embryology
Embryology studies the development
of embryos
The early stages of vertebrate
development are incredibly similar
The explanation for this is that
vertebrates share a common ancestor
and inherited common stages of
development
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Fish, reptile, bird, and mammal
embryos all have a tail and gill slits.
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Biological Molecules
Biologists now have the
technology to compare
DNA, RNA, proteins, and
other biological molecules in
different organisms
(molecular homology)
Organisms that have the
least amount of differences
in these molecules are
closely related by a common
ancestor
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Biogeography
Closely related species live in the same geographic
regions
This results from having similar needs so that they need
similar habitats
Furthermore, in isolated areas (islands), you will find
species that are unique in the world (endemic)
Additionally, similar environments will give rise to
different species that have similar traits
Example: Flying squirrel (mammal)of North America is
very similar to the Sugar glider (marsupial) of Australia
Meiosis KM
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Can we see evolution today?
Organisms on Earth ARE currently evolving
One familiar example is bacteria- we have
to keep coming up with different
antibiotics to fight the rapid evolution of
bacteria. They evolve to become resistant
to the antibiotics
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Can we see evolution today?
It is very hard to see evolution in higher
organisms- as the process takes
hundreds-thousands of years
But we CAN observe natural selection
in many species in a relatively short
period of time (such as with the
peppered moths)
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The goal of population genetics is to
understand the genetic composition of
a population and the forces that
determine and change that
composition.
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Variation in a Population
Population genetics is the study of evolution
from a genetic point of view
Evolution at the genetic level is microevolution
Population genetics looks at the alleles
(variations) in a population and how they
change over time (evolve)
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Variation in a Population
Population genetics also looks at populations as a
whole, because population is the smallest unit in
which evolution can occur
A population is defined as a group of individuals
of the same species that routinely interbreed
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What can cause traits to
vary in a population?
Mutations-which are random
changes in DNA sequences
Recombination-genes are
reshuffled in meiosis-due to
independent assortment and
crossing over
Random pairing of gametesorganisms produce many gametesany one can be involved in
fertilization
The environment also influences
the outcome of many traits
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The Gene Pool
The gene pool is
the total genetic
information
available in a
population
So, ALL alleles for
EVERY gene in a
population
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Genetic Equilibrium
Hardy-Weinberg Genetic Equilibrium is a principle that
states genotype frequencies tend to remain the same over
generations unless acted upon by an outside force
Hardy-Weinberg equation(s):
p2 +2pq + q2 = 1
p+q=1
p = dominant allele
q = recessive allele
p2 = homozygous dominant
pq = heterozygous
q2 = homozygous recessive
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Example
A population of bunnies has the phenotype of 36%
white bunnies(the recessive gene) and the rest are
black. Based on this data, what are the frequency
of each genotype?
Things to consider:
What are the possible genotypes?
Do you know any variables? 2pq, p2, or q2
How do you solve for p or q?
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Solution
36 % of the bunnies are
ANSWER:
white
Genotype = bb
p2 = 0.16 or 16% (BB)
Therefore, 36% of the
2 pq = 0.48 or 48% (Bb)
q2
bunnies =
q2 = 0.36
q = 0.6
Since q = 0.6, then
p+q=1
1–q=p
p = 0.4 (40%)
q2 = 0.36 or 36% (bb)
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Genetic Equilibrium
Hardy-Weinberg Genetic Equilibrium
assumptions:
No net mutations occur, so alleles remain the
same
Individuals neither leave nor come into the
population (no gene flow)
The population is large (ideally infinite)
Natural Selection DOES NOT occur (so random
mating and no environmental pressures)
Random mating (no sexual selection)
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Non-Equilibrium
If the alleles and genes do not stay the same over
generations, we know populations are out of
equilibrium and evolution may occur
Equilibrium is no change, evolution is change
We can tell if frequencies stay the same by
calculating them using the Hardy-Weinberg
equation
So, when genes and alleles change, natural
selection and evolution are occurring according
to Hardy-Weinberg
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Non-Equilibrium
Many things can disrupt genetic equilibrium and in
fact populations RARELY stay at equilibrium for very
long
What disrupts equilibrium and cause evolution?
Mutations
Gene flow
Genetic drift
Founder effect
Nonrandom mating
Natural Selection
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Mutations
We have already discussed many avenues of
genetic mutation
Mutation rates tend to be low in animals
and plants (about 1 mutation in every
100,000 genes per generation)
In sexually reproducing organisms, sexual
recombination is a more important vector
for change
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Gene flow
Immigration (individuals coming in) and
emigration (individuals leaving) naturally occurs
in many populations
This causes gene flow- which is the movement
of genes from one population to another
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Genetic Drift
In small populations,
chance events can
change allele
frequencies in a
population
A change in allele
frequencies is called
Genetic Drift
Frequency means
how often something
occurs
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Bottleneck effect
A disaster in the environment can lead to a drastic
change in allele frequency
Through random chance, certain alleles may be overrepresented in a population
This gives us an avenue to alter the genotypic and
phenotypic expression of the population
This bottleneck effect would change the new
population into something different from the original
population
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Genetic Drift Example
In a population of 25 trees, where there are two alleles
for height- tall (T) and short (t) and the allele
frequency is 50:50
A natural disaster- such as a fire, wipes out most if the
population
Let’s say 2 trees survive, but they are both homozygous
tall (TT)- so now the allele frequency will be 100% for
the tall allele
In a population of more (say 1,000), this is less likely to
happen- more trees and therefore more of the original
alleles would survive
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Genetic drift
The
random
change of
allelic
frequency
in a
population
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Founder effect
When a few individuals from a
population become isolated from the
source population, they may change to
fill new habitats (founder effect)
Darwin observed this phenomena
when he observed the finches on the
Galapagos islands
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Nonrandom mating
Many species do not mate randomly
Some mate with individuals close to them
Some mate with individuals that have similar
traits to them
Both of these result in increasing certain allele
frequencies
For example, very tall birds, may only mate with
other tall birds (not medium or small), this
would cause the tall allele to become more
prevalent
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Nonrandom mating
Many species of birds, such as peacocks look for
specific characteristics when they mate, like
elaborate colors
This is called sexual selection
This leads to sexual dimorphism, a difference
between the physical
characteristics of males vs.
females
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Intersexual vs. Intrasexual
Intrasexual selection:
Intersexual selection:
Occurs between the
Occurs when one sex
same sex
Direct competition
between individuals of
the same sex to
maintain the ability to
pass on their traits
Example: Male lions
and control of the
pride
is able to select a mate
Becomes a
competition to attract
a mate
Examples: Birds –
showiness of plumage,
ability to build a nest,
birdsong
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Natural Selection
Most significant factor in
evolution of populations
Nature selects against
non-fit individuals
Reduces harmful alleles
Only acts on expressed
phenotypes
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Agents of evolutionary change
1. Mutation
2. Natural selection
3. Genetic drift
4. Gene flow
5. Nonrandom mating
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What is a species?
The biological species concept says a species is a
population of organisms that can successfully
interbreed
The morphological species concept says a species is
a population of organisms that have a similar
appearance
Modern Species Concept- biologists use both of
these criteria to classify both living and extinct species
today
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Other definitions of species
Paleontological species: focuses on the
morphological characteristics of organisms in the
fossil record.
Ecological species: looks at defining species
bases on their role in an ecosystem (niche)
Phylogenetic species: how organisms develop
from a common ancestor (we will be examining
phylogenetic trees later on)
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Forming new species
In order for new species to form, you must have
genetic variation (remember from meiosis,
mutation, etc)
Yet not all variation is a result of genetics
There are also numerous environmental factors
that affect phenotype
Lack of nutrition/too much nutrition
Key thing to remember: environmental
changes to phenotype are NOT heritable
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How does a species form?
The process of species formation is called speciation
Speciation begins with isolation
In order to form a new species, you must begin with
some sort of reproductive isolation
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Scale of speciation
When you talk about changes in a single
gene pool, this is described as
microevolution
Example: Peppered moths of England
When you discuss changes over vast tracts of
time, this is referred to as macroevolution
Example: Going from the age of reptiles
to the age of mammals
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Fitness
In order to determine which species will be successful
(or what traits are passed on to offspring), we must
examine adaptive advantages
Fitness: contribution of an individual to the gene
pool for the next generation
Relative fitness: contribution of a particular
genotype for the next generation
Therefore, for speciation to occur, the new traits must
have some sort of fitness “advantage” for them to be
passed to a new generation
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How does a species form?
Allopatric speciation is a result of
geographic isolation (some physical
barrier that separates populations)
Allopatric means “different homelands”
Once one species is separated into two (or
more), gene flow between them stops
As each experiences different
environmental pressures, genetic drift
occurs in different ways
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How does a species form?
Sometimes groups of organisms
become reproductively isolated
This may or may not be due to a
physical barrier
Reproductive isolation is when two
individuals cannot successfully mate
(this means mate and produce
healthy FERTILE offspring)
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How does a species form?
Types of reproductive isolation
Prezygotic isolation- occurs before
fertilization
Different species do not breed at the same
time
Different species have different mating rituals
(such as a mating call or “dance”)
Basically this type of isolation means the
different species WILL JUST NOT MATE in
nature
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Types of Pre-zygotic Isolation
1. Geographic isolation
2. Ecological isolation
4. Behavioral isolation
3. Temporal isolation
5. Mechanical isolation
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How does a species form?
Postzygotic isolation- occurs after fertilization
Gametes are not be compatible and do not
produce healthy offspring
If offspring is healthy it may be infertile
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How does a species form?
Sympatric
Speciation- occurs
when 2
subpopulation
become
reproductively
isolated, but have
no physical barriers
between them.
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Sympatric speciation
Examples of sympatric speciation:
Polyploidy is a mutation that often occurs in plants
(can change chromosome number – go from 2n to 4n,
autopolyploid)
As a result the 4n plant can no longer breed with the 2n
plant . . . different chromosome number
Animals taking advantage of different aspects of the
same resources (Darwin’s finches)
An environment that repeatedly, and drastically, changes
Lake or pond repeatedly drying out and refilling
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Rate of Speciation: Punctuated
Equilibrium vs. Gradualism
Gradualism
Evolution occurs
much more slowly
(gradually) and
consistently
Speciation occurs
at intervals
further apart
Punctuated
Equilibrium
Evolution that
occurs at more
intervals and less
consistently
Speciation occurs
more frequently
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Types of Evolution
Convergent evolution-
the process by which
different species evolve
similar traits
This often occurs due to
the different species
living in similar types of
environments
Sugar Gliders and Flying
squirrels both adapted to
living in tall trees, but on
different continents
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Types of Evolution
Divergent Evolution- a process in which
the descendents of a single ancestor
diversify into several different species that
fit a variety of habitats
A great example is Darwin’s finches
One species of finch came from South
America and evolved into 13 distinct
species-each of which has a different
habitat
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Types of Evolution
Adaptive Radiation– when a new population in a
new environment undergoes divergent evolution
until it fills many parts of the environment
The finches evolved in almost every part of the
Galapagos Islands
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Types of Evolution
Coevolution– when two or more species
have evolved adaptations due to each other’s
influence
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Coevolution:
Pollinators help plants reproduce and
plants give food to pollinators
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Steps of Speciation in Darwin’s finches
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Founding Fathers & Mothers-finches made their way
from South America
Separation of Populations-finches crossed to
different islands
Changes in gene pool-Over time, populations
adapted to the needs of their environment
Reproductive isolation-birds prefer to mate with
birds that have same beak as they do-2 species have
evolved.
Share same island-co-existance, extinction, or
further evolution
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