* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Evolution of Populations
Gene expression programming wikipedia , lookup
The Selfish Gene wikipedia , lookup
Hologenome theory of evolution wikipedia , lookup
Evolutionary landscape wikipedia , lookup
Sex-limited genes wikipedia , lookup
Sexual selection wikipedia , lookup
Sociobiology wikipedia , lookup
Organisms at high altitude wikipedia , lookup
Genetic drift wikipedia , lookup
Natural selection wikipedia , lookup
Mate choice wikipedia , lookup
Saltation (biology) wikipedia , lookup
The eclipse of Darwinism wikipedia , lookup
CHAPTER 15: EVOLUTION OF POPULATIONS Biology 1 Variation   Inherited differences between individuals of a population Can be  Physical characteristic  Biochemical characteristic  Behavioral characteristic  If there is no variation for a trait, it is said to be fixed Gene Pool   All of genes found within a population Relative frequency of alleles- proportion of gene pool that the allele makes up Sources of Variation  Mutation  Creates new variation by changing parts of the genetic code  Gene Shuffling  Creates new variation by the reshuffling of genes during sexual reproduction  Chromosome segregation  Crossing-over Single Gene Traits • • • • Traits are coded for by a single gene If trait has simple Mendelian (dominant/recessive) inheritance, there are 2 phenotypes possible. If trait has incomplete dominance or codominance, there are 3 phenotypes possible. If trait has multiple alleles, # of phenotypes depends on # of alleles ▫ For example: ABO blood type have 3 alleles with 4 phenotypes possible Natural Selection on Single Trait Genes     Occurs if the phenotypes are not equal in their fitness Relative frequencies within the gene pool change as some phenotypes are selected for (or some are selected against) This is evolution (a change in allele frequencies within a population over time) Natural Selection Refresher Polygenic Traits    Trait is coded for by more than one gene Various phenotypes possible Phenotypes form a bell curve Natural Selection of Polygenic Traits  Directional Selection  One phenotype extreme is selected for (or one against)  Bell curve is shifted to the left or right Natural Selection of Polygenic Traits (continued)  Stabilizing Selection  Both phenotype extremes are selected against (average phenotype is selected for)  Bell curve narrows Natural Selection of Polygenic Traits (continued)  Disruptive Selection  Average phenotype is selected against (extremes are selected for)  Bell curve splits into two peaks Genetic Drift   Change in allelic frequencies due to random effects Effects are seen more in smaller populations Genetic Drift: Bottleneck Effect   Event randomly removes large numbers of individuals from a population Many variations can be lost Genetic Drift: Founder Effect  Small part of the population removes itself (or is removed) from the larger population Genetic Equilibrium   Allelic Frequencies remain the same No evolution  Random mating  Large population  No immigration or emigration  No mutation  No natural selection Speciation    Species - group of individuals that can breed together and produce a fertile offspring Speciation is the process of forming new species from existing species To occur:  Populations of one species must be isolated from each other long enough to accumulate enough changes to become two species Types of Isolation  Geographical Isolation  Populations are separated by a geographical barrier and cannot mate and share genes Types of Isolation  Behavioral Isolation  Populations are separated by behavioral differences and don’t mate with each other to share genes  Temporal Isolation  Populations reproduce at different times so they cannot mate together and share genes This leads to…  Reproductive Isolation  Cannot mate and produce a fertile offspring  Occurs because individuals cannot  Mate together or  Create a zygote or  Create a viable offspring or  Create a fertile offspring EVOLUTIONARY TRENDS  Adaptive Radiation from COMMON DESCENT  Species diversifies into many new species EVOLUTIONARY TRENDS  Convergent Evolution-Analogous Structure  Species evolve to a similar form from different ancestors  Both adapt to similar environment  Examples EVOLUTIONARY TRENDS  Coevolution  Species evolve together because of a close ecological relationship  Coevolution Examples EVOLUTIONARY TRENDS  Punctuated Equilibrium  Evolution shows long stable period and then rapid bursts of change
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            