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Chapter 23 Evolution of Populations Population Genetics • Microevolution – change in genetic make up of a population from generation to generation -modern view that refined Darwin’s ideas -Darwin’s mechanism was for change in species over time - did not account of how inheritable traits appeared in population or how they were passed to offspring - based on old blending theory rather than Mendel’s particulate theory which appeared years after Origin of Species was published Modern Synthesis • Original thought was that Mendel’s work contradicted Darwin’s theories • Result of decades of practice and debate led to the blended ideas from both *Population genetics – study of how populations change genetically over time • Modern synthesis – comprehensive theory of evolution that integrated ideas from many other fields such as statistics, Mendelian genetics, botany, natural selection Mutation and Sexual Recombination • Mutations allow for variation in populations • Only mutations that occur in gametes can be passed on to offspring – small fraction • Point mutations mainly harmless and unnoticeable • Chromosomal mutations can delete, disrupt, and rearrange and are considered harmful - duplication is the main source of variation • Mutation rate is about 1 in 100,000 genes in humans, much higher rate in viruses and microbes • Sexual recombination far more important in producing variation from generation to generation Hardy Weinberg Theorem • Gene pool – aggregate of genes in a population at any one time • Hardy Weinberg Theorem states that the frequencies of alleles and genotypes in a population’s gene pool remain constant from generation to generation – not evolving • Hardy Weinberg Equilibrium – results from random donation of gametes and random mating yielding same allele frequencies in each generation and predictable genotypes Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium HW = p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1 p = dominant allele Pq = heterozygous q = recessive allele Conditions of HW Equilibrium • 5 criteria for non-evolving populations: 1. Extremely large population size 2. No gene flow 3. No mutations 4. Random mating 5. No natural selection *conditions are rarely met for long in nature *departure from these conditions leads to evolution Factors of Evolution 1. Natural selection – variation in heritable traits make individuals better suited and produce more offspring that will survive in environment 2. Genetic drift – unpredictable fluctuations in allele frequencies from one generation to the next a. Bottleneck effect – sudden change in environment that drastically reduces size of population and results in restrictive gene pool *can be severely altered by humans Factors of Evolution Factors of Evolution • Genetic drift b. Founder effect – occurs when individuals become isolated from a larger population and gene pool bottlenecks enough to establish a new population that does not reflect source population • Gene Flow – transfer of alleles between populations – may gain or lose alleles, reduces differences between populations Adaptive Evolution • Of all factors that influence evolution natural selection will adapt a population to an environment- accumulation and maintenance of favorable genes • Not all phenotypic variation is heritable – product combines inherited genotype and multiple environmental influences • Variation can be from discrete or quantitative characters - discrete – single character; single gene - quantitative – single character; 2 or more genes Polymorphism • Genetic polymorphism – more than one possibility for a character influence by several loci Ex: height in humans varies but follows a continuum. • Phenotypic polymorphisms – occurs if a population have 2 or more distinct forms of a character represented in high enough frequencies to be noticeable Genetic Variation • Average heterozygosity- measurement of the percent of loci for a genome being heterozygous -used to measure polymorphisms at molecular and whole gene levels Ex: fruit fly has average heterozygosity of 14% or 1,920 of 13,700 genes are heterozygous while rest are homozygous Evolutionary Fitness • Fitness – refers to the contribution an individual makes to gene pool relative to contribution of others Ex: barnacle producing more eggs because of efficient food collecting; moths having more offspring than others because body coloring conceals more from predators Relative fitness – involves genotype contribution compared to alternative genotypes for the same locus Ex: Zero relative fitness for sterile plant even if it outlives other members of population Modes of Selection • 3 modes of selection that can alter the frequency distribution of heritable traits: 1. Directional selection – shifts the frequency curve for a phenotypic character one direction or the other by favoring those that deviate from the average Ex: darker mice favored to light colored mice because be concealed from predators 2. Disruptive selection – favors those whose characters are at extreme ends Ex: Large billed finches can crack hard seed shells, small billed can feed on soft seeds, but medium billed have trouble with both 3. Stabilizing selection – favors individual in the medium or intermediate variants and acts against extremes Modes of Selection • Balanced selection – in order to preserve variation, occurs when natural selection maintains stable frequencies of two or more phenotypic forms in a population, or polymorphs Heterozygote Advantage – heterzygotes at a gene locus have greater fitness than homozygotes Ex: Hemoglobin coding in humans -homozygous recessive form sickle cell disease -homozygous dominant have normal hemoglobin, but are susceptible to malaria -heterozygous are resistant to malaria and have normal hemoglobin Modes of Selection • Frequency dependent selection – fitness of a morph declines if it becomes too common • Neutral variation – occurs when genetic variation has little or no advantage to reproductive success • Sexual selection has implications for mating success 1. Intrasexual – males competing for dominance and maintaining status with group of females mates 2. Intersexual – mate choice in which females choose the healthier, showy male Enigma of Sexual Reproduction • Sexually reproduction organisms are at a handicap for rapid population expansion Why Natural Selection Cannot Make Perfect Organisms 1. Evolution is limited by historical constraints 2. Adaptations are often compromises 3. Chance and natural selection interact 4. Selection can edit only existing variations