Phylogeny, taxonomy, and evolution of the endothelin receptor gene
... rerooted such that their therian and non-therian groups were now both monophyletic. Such rerooting is allowed, given the time reversibility of the WAG + C model (Felsenstein, 2004). The potential functional importance of the identified rate shift and conserved sites was assessed against the known pos ...
... rerooted such that their therian and non-therian groups were now both monophyletic. Such rerooting is allowed, given the time reversibility of the WAG + C model (Felsenstein, 2004). The potential functional importance of the identified rate shift and conserved sites was assessed against the known pos ...
The Use of Genetic Information for Nonmedical Purposes
... Closely related to the permissible use of genetic information by employers is the issue of how employers gain access to genetic information. Aside from performing the tests themselves (currently not done for financial and other reasons and an unlikely prospect for the near term), there are two main ...
... Closely related to the permissible use of genetic information by employers is the issue of how employers gain access to genetic information. Aside from performing the tests themselves (currently not done for financial and other reasons and an unlikely prospect for the near term), there are two main ...
DEPARTMENT OF VETERINARY ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY NEWSLETTER 2014
... Chameleons tend to show darker colors when angered, or attempting to scare or intimidate others, while males show lighter multicolored patterns when courting females. Some species such as Smith’s dwarf chameleon adjust their colors for camouflage in accordance with the vision of the specific predato ...
... Chameleons tend to show darker colors when angered, or attempting to scare or intimidate others, while males show lighter multicolored patterns when courting females. Some species such as Smith’s dwarf chameleon adjust their colors for camouflage in accordance with the vision of the specific predato ...
Tandem duplications and the limits of natural
... Tandem duplications are an essential source of genetic novelty, and their variation in natural populations is expected to influence adaptive walks. Here, we describe evolutionary impacts of recently-derived, segregating tandem duplications in Drosophila yakuba and Drosophila simulans. We observe an ...
... Tandem duplications are an essential source of genetic novelty, and their variation in natural populations is expected to influence adaptive walks. Here, we describe evolutionary impacts of recently-derived, segregating tandem duplications in Drosophila yakuba and Drosophila simulans. We observe an ...
Mathews and Kramer FINAL
... responses underlie KNOX down-regulation. One of these is based on polar auxin transport (PAT), a phenomenon whose broader significance for plant development cannot be overstated. The polarized, cell-to-cell trafficking of auxin, mediated by the PINFORMED (PIN), P-glycoprotein ABC transporter (PGP) a ...
... responses underlie KNOX down-regulation. One of these is based on polar auxin transport (PAT), a phenomenon whose broader significance for plant development cannot be overstated. The polarized, cell-to-cell trafficking of auxin, mediated by the PINFORMED (PIN), P-glycoprotein ABC transporter (PGP) a ...
GLEAM - an Evolutionary Algorithm for Planning and - KIT
... optimized plans, i.e. sequences of commands, to control dynamic processes. First example of such a problem solved by GLEAM was the control of industrial robot movements. The algorithm should generate a command sequence consisting of robot control primitives, i.e. a robot language program, and the ex ...
... optimized plans, i.e. sequences of commands, to control dynamic processes. First example of such a problem solved by GLEAM was the control of industrial robot movements. The algorithm should generate a command sequence consisting of robot control primitives, i.e. a robot language program, and the ex ...
WARDS Lab 7 - Genetics of Drosophila
... their alleles will be closely linked instead of being independent. It must also be assumed that the genes in question are not located on the X chromosome; this could cause the expression of the trait to be linked to the sex of the offspring. Color blindness in humans is a good example of this type o ...
... their alleles will be closely linked instead of being independent. It must also be assumed that the genes in question are not located on the X chromosome; this could cause the expression of the trait to be linked to the sex of the offspring. Color blindness in humans is a good example of this type o ...
Natural Selection
... Key Stage 3 gives learners a great platform of scientific knowledge that they can build on in Key Stage 4. At Key Stage 3, learners will have studied many of the fundamental aspects of natural selection. These include how individuals in a population are different and how living organisms show adapta ...
... Key Stage 3 gives learners a great platform of scientific knowledge that they can build on in Key Stage 4. At Key Stage 3, learners will have studied many of the fundamental aspects of natural selection. These include how individuals in a population are different and how living organisms show adapta ...
Speciation due to hybrid necrosis in plant
... different locations. More recently, processes of adaptive speciation, which unfold in the absence of geographical isolation and during which phenotype distributions become multimodal due to ecological interactions such as competition for resources of predation, have received considerable attention ( ...
... different locations. More recently, processes of adaptive speciation, which unfold in the absence of geographical isolation and during which phenotype distributions become multimodal due to ecological interactions such as competition for resources of predation, have received considerable attention ( ...
Speciation due to hybrid necrosis in plant
... different locations. More recently, processes of adaptive speciation, which unfold in the absence of geographical isolation and during which phenotype distributions become multimodal due to ecological interactions such as competition for resources of predation, have received considerable attention ( ...
... different locations. More recently, processes of adaptive speciation, which unfold in the absence of geographical isolation and during which phenotype distributions become multimodal due to ecological interactions such as competition for resources of predation, have received considerable attention ( ...
Non-syndromic progressive hearing loss DFNA38 is caused by
... and lacks any syndromic features. In a six-generation kindred from Newfoundland, Canada, WFS1 Ala716Thr (2146 G→A) was shared by all deaf members of the family and was specific to deaf individuals. The causal relationship between this missense mutation and deafness was supported by two observations ...
... and lacks any syndromic features. In a six-generation kindred from Newfoundland, Canada, WFS1 Ala716Thr (2146 G→A) was shared by all deaf members of the family and was specific to deaf individuals. The causal relationship between this missense mutation and deafness was supported by two observations ...
Part II: Mechanisms of Evolutionary Change
... The purpose of this case study is to help you develop an intuition about how selection and mutation cause evolution. You will use a software simulation of an evolving population to analyze the examples discussed in Chapter 5, and to answer a variety questions concerning changes in the frequencies of ...
... The purpose of this case study is to help you develop an intuition about how selection and mutation cause evolution. You will use a software simulation of an evolving population to analyze the examples discussed in Chapter 5, and to answer a variety questions concerning changes in the frequencies of ...
Bird Beak Buffet! - Iditarod Area School District – Theme
... • There is heredity. Traits can be passed on from parent to offspring through our genes. • There is competition (sometime referred to as differential survival and reproduction) so that some individuals survive and reproduce more than others. ! The end result is natural selection – the individuals wi ...
... • There is heredity. Traits can be passed on from parent to offspring through our genes. • There is competition (sometime referred to as differential survival and reproduction) so that some individuals survive and reproduce more than others. ! The end result is natural selection – the individuals wi ...
On the interrelationships of certain species of
... vonols with odour. The odour of S7 is sweet; in P. axillaris absent. This in itself ...
... vonols with odour. The odour of S7 is sweet; in P. axillaris absent. This in itself ...
Darwinian Evolutionary Theory and Constructions of Race in Nazi
... had previously proposed that organisms evolve from simple to complex over time, Origin of Species provided an answer to the question of what mechanisms cause evolutionary changes to occur. Darwin proposed that within a species the individuals with the traits best adapted to a given environment will ...
... had previously proposed that organisms evolve from simple to complex over time, Origin of Species provided an answer to the question of what mechanisms cause evolutionary changes to occur. Darwin proposed that within a species the individuals with the traits best adapted to a given environment will ...
selection and mutation as mechanisms
... The purpose of this case study is to help you develop an intuition about how selection and mutation cause evolution. You will use a software simulation of an evolving population to analyze the examples discussed in Chapter 5, and to answer a variety questions concerning changes in the frequencies of ...
... The purpose of this case study is to help you develop an intuition about how selection and mutation cause evolution. You will use a software simulation of an evolving population to analyze the examples discussed in Chapter 5, and to answer a variety questions concerning changes in the frequencies of ...
Fig 1 - Centre for Biodiversity Genomics
... Taxonomic diversity varies substantially among these lineages (Table 1); the Araneae are the most diverse of the large-bodied taxa with 45,000 described species, but the Acariformes likely includes more than a million [3]. Although arachnid monophyly is well-supported, phylogenetic relationships amo ...
... Taxonomic diversity varies substantially among these lineages (Table 1); the Araneae are the most diverse of the large-bodied taxa with 45,000 described species, but the Acariformes likely includes more than a million [3]. Although arachnid monophyly is well-supported, phylogenetic relationships amo ...
Common seashore animals of Southeastern Alaska
... Gonionemus vertens – Clinging jellyfish Unlike many jellies this species often adheres to algae, eelgrass or other fixed objects. One of several dozen hydromedusae found in SE Alaska. ...
... Gonionemus vertens – Clinging jellyfish Unlike many jellies this species often adheres to algae, eelgrass or other fixed objects. One of several dozen hydromedusae found in SE Alaska. ...
Lecture 7
... finding optimal p is hard, finding optimal p(t) is harder still user-defined feedback mechanism, how to ”optimize”? when would natural selection work for strategy parameters? ...
... finding optimal p is hard, finding optimal p(t) is harder still user-defined feedback mechanism, how to ”optimize”? when would natural selection work for strategy parameters? ...
super bug
... Part II – Mechanism of Evolution “I know what a super bug is,” I muttered to myself. “It’s simply a bacterium that is resistant to most or all of the drugs that could be used to treat it.” The boredom of just sitting here was really getting to me, so I kept reading my Google search results to find o ...
... Part II – Mechanism of Evolution “I know what a super bug is,” I muttered to myself. “It’s simply a bacterium that is resistant to most or all of the drugs that could be used to treat it.” The boredom of just sitting here was really getting to me, so I kept reading my Google search results to find o ...
Georgidis Hartebes Genetics
... RATIONALE Species’ geographical ranges are today so fragmented, it is often difficult to know whether remnant populations were once connected by dispersal and migration, or isolated by natural barriers. We need to know this information when action must be taken to conserve a species, for example, wh ...
... RATIONALE Species’ geographical ranges are today so fragmented, it is often difficult to know whether remnant populations were once connected by dispersal and migration, or isolated by natural barriers. We need to know this information when action must be taken to conserve a species, for example, wh ...
LAB #17: Population Genetics and Evolution
... genotype are irrelevant to mate selection. The class will simulate a population of randomly mating heterozygous individuals with an initial gene frequency of 0.5 for the dominant allele A and the recessive allele a and genotype frequencies of 0.25 AA, 0.50 Aa, and 0.25 aa. 1. Your initial genotype i ...
... genotype are irrelevant to mate selection. The class will simulate a population of randomly mating heterozygous individuals with an initial gene frequency of 0.5 for the dominant allele A and the recessive allele a and genotype frequencies of 0.25 AA, 0.50 Aa, and 0.25 aa. 1. Your initial genotype i ...
plants are more than the sum of their parts
... modules) while allowing for independent evolution of other sets of integrated characters (of other modules) that do not share common development or function [26,28,34 –36]. Animal-pollinated flowers are predicted to be highly integrated ([37,38]; reviewed in [39]); the coordination of multiple organ ...
... modules) while allowing for independent evolution of other sets of integrated characters (of other modules) that do not share common development or function [26,28,34 –36]. Animal-pollinated flowers are predicted to be highly integrated ([37,38]; reviewed in [39]); the coordination of multiple organ ...
Towards a genodynamics of hybrid zones
... of these areas is summarized in Figures 9.2 and 9.3. The hybrid zone is generally less than 9 km wide, and over 80% of the morphological change OCCUrsin the central 3 km. The diversity of hybrid phenotypes suggests that mating probably OCCursat random among toadlets at each breeding site. No evidenc ...
... of these areas is summarized in Figures 9.2 and 9.3. The hybrid zone is generally less than 9 km wide, and over 80% of the morphological change OCCUrsin the central 3 km. The diversity of hybrid phenotypes suggests that mating probably OCCursat random among toadlets at each breeding site. No evidenc ...
File - Data Mining and Soft computing techniques
... replacement. During the selection stage, a temporary population is created in which the fittest individuals (those corresponding to the best solutions contained in the population) have a higher number of instances than those less fit (natural selection). The reproductive operators are applied to the ...
... replacement. During the selection stage, a temporary population is created in which the fittest individuals (those corresponding to the best solutions contained in the population) have a higher number of instances than those less fit (natural selection). The reproductive operators are applied to the ...
Koinophilia
Koinophilia is an evolutionary hypothesis concerning sexual selection which proposes that animals seeking mate preferentially choose individuals with a minimum of unusual features. Koinophilia intends to explain the clustering of organisms into species and other issues described by Darwin's Dilemma. The term derives from the Greek, koinos, ""the usual"", and philos, ""fondness"".Natural selection causes beneficial inherited features to become more common and eventually replace their disadvantageous counterparts. A sexually-reproducing animal would be expected to avoid individuals with unusual features, and to prefer to mate with individuals displaying a predominance of common or average features. This means that mates displaying mutant features are also avoided. This is advantageous because most mutations that manifest themselves as changes in appearance, functionality or behavior, are disadvantageous. Because it is impossible to judge whether a new mutation is beneficial or not, koinophilic animals avoid them all, at the cost of avoiding the occasional beneficial mutation. Thus, koinophilia, although not infallible in its ability to distinguish fit from unfit mates, is a good strategy when choosing a mate. A koinophilic choice ensures that offspring are likely to inherit features that have been successful in the past.Koinophilia differs from assortative mating, where ""like prefers like"". If like preferred like, leucistic animals (such as white peacocks) would be sexually attracted to one another, and a leucistic subspecies would come into being. Koinophilia predicts that this is unlikely because leucistic animals are attracted to the average in the same way as other animals. Since non-leucistic animals are not attracted by leucism, few leucistic individuals find mates, and leucistic lineages will rarely form.Koinophilia provides simple explanations for the rarity of speciation (in particular Darwin's Dilemma), evolutionary stasis, punctuated equilibria, and the evolution of cooperation. Koinophilia might also contribute to the maintenance of sexual reproduction, preventing its reversion to the much simpler and inherently more advantageous asexual form of reproduction.The koinophilia hypothesis is supported by research into the physical attractiveness of human faces by Judith Langlois and her co-workers. They found that the average of two human faces was more attractive than either of the faces from which that average was derived. The more faces (of the same gender and age) that were used in the averaging process the more attractive and appealing the average face became. This work into averageness supports koinophilia as an explanation of what constitutes a beautiful face, and how the individuality of a face is recognized.