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Name:__________________________________________________________ Microevolution & Mechanisms of Evolution Activity Station One: Skittlebugs A population of Skittlebugs live in Bottle Forest. Skittlebugs have 5 different color variants: yellow, green, orange, red, and purple. In the current environmental conditions, all colored Skittlebugs have approximately the same chance of surviving and reproducing. 1. The population of Skittlebugs in Bottle Forest has 20 of each color Skittlebug (total of 100 Skittlebugs). What is the percent composition of the population of each color Skittlebug? Color % of population Yellow 20/100 X 100 = 20% One day, a flash flood comes through the forest and kills all but 6 Skittlebugs that just happened to be high up on a rock when the flood came through. 2. Pour 6 Skittlebugs from the Bottle Forest to represent the new population after the flood. Examine your new population. What is the percent composition of the population of each color Skittlebug in the new population? Color % of population ______/6 X 100= __________% 3. What happened to the variation & genetic diversity of the Skittlebug population after the flood? Did it increase or decrease? Refer to your data table. 4. Which of the following mechanisms of evolution does this simulate (more than one may be correct; if so, identify both): gene flow, genetic drift, bottleneck effect, founder effect? How do you know? Station 2: Owl Island Think about the population of Bensalem High School. Record what phenotypes exist within Bensalem HS for the following traits (be as specific as possible, i.e. light brown, dark brown, etc.): Hair color: Eye color: You and your group members decide to leave the population of Bensalem High School. You move to Owl Island and start your own population. Record what phenotypes exist within your new population: Hair color: Eye color: 1. What happened to the variation & hence genetic diversity of the population of Owl Island compared to the initial population? 2. Which of the following mechanisms of evolution does this simulate (more than one may be correct; if so, identify both): gene flow, genetic drift, bottleneck effect, founder effect? How do you know? Station 3: Skittlebug meets Skittlebug Hamlin Forest has two populations of Skittlebugs: 20 purple Skittlebugs live on the west side and 20 yellow Skittlebugs live on the east side. The two groups are separated by a small river (Skittlebugs can’t swim). One day, a tree falls across the river, creating a bridge for the Skittlebugs to travel back and forth from the west side to the east side. 5 yellow Skittlebugs move to the west side from the east side. Demonstrate this by moving 5 yellow Skittlebugs from the east side beaker to the west side beaker. Analyze the percent composition of each allele in the west side of the forest before and after the yellow Skittlebugs joined this population. Allele Number in West Side population Before Number in West Side Population After Purple Yellow 1. Did the variation in the west side of the forest increase or decrease after the Skittlebugs were able to move between populations? (Think about how many alleles existed in the population before versus after) 2. Which of the following mechanisms of evolution does this simulate (more than one may be correct; if so, identify both): gene flow, genetic drift, bottleneck effect, founder effect? How do you know? 3. If the tree had never fallen, the two populations of Skittlebugs would have remained separate. If they were separate for long enough, do you think they could eventually evolve into different species? Explain. Station Four: Microevolution Scenario 1: Pick the graph that shows a change in the population of giraffes after reading the scenario. Giraffe’s will be successful in an environment with large trees if the giraffe has a long neck. There was a selection pressure against short necks, since individuals with short necks could not reach as many leaves on which to feed. As a result, the distribution of neck length shifted to favor individuals with long necks. Question 1: What graph matches the scenario and why? Scenario 2- Plant height might be acted on by stabilizing selection. A plant that is too short may not be able to compete with other plants for sunlight. However, extremely tall plants may be more susceptible to wind damage. Combined, these two selection pressures select to maintain plants of medium height. The number of plants of medium height will increase while the numbers of short and tall plants will decrease. Question 2: What graph matches the scenario and why? Scenario 3- Imagine a plant of extremely variable height that is pollinated by three different pollinators, one that was attracted to short plants, another that preferred plants of medium height and a third that visited only the tallest plants. If the pollinator that preferred plants of medium height disappeared from an area, medium height plants would be selected against and the population would tend toward both short and tall, but not medium height plants. Question 3: What graph matches the scenario and why?