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Population Genetics and Speciation Section 1 Bellringer Imagine that you are in charge of a goat ranch. The cost of fencing is high, so you must implement a breeding program that will produce shorterlegged goats within the next 20 years. Write down how you would meet this goal. Population Genetics and Speciation Section 1 Key Ideas • How is microevolution studied? • How is phenotypic variation measured? • How are genetic variation and change measured? • How does genetic variation originate? Population Genetics and Speciation Section 1 Population Genetics and Speciation Population Section 1 What kinds of variation can Geneticsbe seen in this photograph? • Charles Darwin knew that heredity influences characteristics, but he did know about genes. • We can now study and predict genetic variation and change that underlie evolution. • Microevolution is evolution at theinlevel of variation flower color and plant height genetic change in populations. Population Genetics and Speciation Section 1 Population Genetics, continued • Microevolution can be studied by observing changes in the numbers and types of alleles in populations, called population genetics. • The study of genetics and evolution are advancing together. • The link from microevolution to macroevolution—speciation—can be studied in detail. Population Genetics and Speciation Section 1 What do we now know about heredity that Darwin did not know? We know about genetics, such as how genotype relates to phenotype. Visual Concept: Population Eye colorSection is a 1 polygenic Phenotypic Variation character. • The variety of phenotypes that exists for a given Different characteristic depend on how many genes genes affect it. control different • Polygenic characters are influenced by several pigments, genes. Examples include human eye color and which combine height. to produce • Biologists study polygenic phenotypes by various shades measuring each individual in the population and then analyzing the distribution of ofthe blue, green, measurements. or brown. Population Genetics and Speciation Population Genetics and Speciation Section 1 Visual Concept: Single Allele, Multiple Allele and Polygenic Traits Population Genetics and Speciation Section 1 Phenotypic Variation, continued • A distribution is an overview of the relative frequency and range of a set of values. • Often, some values in a range are more common than others. • A normal distribution, or bell curve, is one that tends to cluster around an average value in the center of the range. Population Genetics and Speciation Normal Distribution Section 1 Why do polygenic characters vary so much? How do the number of genes for a character relate to because many unique its variation? The more genes that affect a character, the more combinations of alleles variations there can be. are possible Population Genetics and Speciation Section 1 Measuring Variation and Change • The particular combination of alleles in a population at any one point in time makes up a gene pool. • Genetic variation and change are measured in terms of the frequency of alleles in the gene pool of a population. • A frequency is the proportion or ratio of a group that is of one type. To study genetic change, the frequency of each allele in a population can be tracked over time. Population Genetics and Speciation Section 1 What is the main measure of genetic variation? frequency of alleles Visual Concept: Population and Gene Movement Population Genetics and Speciation Genotype Frequencies Vs. Allele Frequencies Is the dominant allele always the most frequent? No. Even if an allele is dominant, it may not be the most frequent allele in a population. Section 1 Population Genetics and Speciation Section 1 Why is mutation so important? Sources of Genetic Variation • Evolution cannot proceed if there is no variation. The major source of new alleles in natural populations is mutation in germ cells. • Mutation generates new alleles at a slow rate. • Only mutations in germ cells (egg and sperm) are passed on to offspring. • Visual because it is the source of variation in populations Population Genetics and Speciation Section 1 Genotype Frequencies • (frequency of EE) + (frequency of Ee) + (frequency of ee) = 1 • (frequency of E) + (frequency of e) = 1 • What is the sum of all allele frequencies for any one gene? • 1 or 100% Population Genetics and Speciation Section 1 Exit Question The sum of all allele frequencies in a population at any time is called ______. A. polygenic B. genotype frequency C. a phenotypic variation D. a gene pool Population Genetics and Speciation Section 1