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Artificial Selection By: Krista Coleman and Justin DeCotiis Starting Question Is it possible for you to use natural selection on an organism of your choice? Why or why not? The objective is to be able to answer these questions: • • • How does artificial selection compare and contrast to natural selection? How do people produce offspring with preferred characteristics? What does evolution act upon within a population? Adaptive Radiation: What is it? •A common ancestry •Association between environments and the traits used to exploit those environments •Rapid speciation: presence of one or more bursts in the emergence of new species Misconception: “Evolution is a theory about the origin of life.” Evolutionary theory deals mainly with how life changed after its origin. Misconception: “Evolution is like a climb up a ladder of progress; organisms are always getting better.” Natural selection weeds out those unfit. No organism has to be perfect. Misconception: “Evolution means that life changed ‘by chance.’ ” Chance is certainly a factor in evolution, but there are also non-random evolutionary mechanisms. Random mutation is the ultimate source of genetic variation, however natural selection, the process by which some variants survive and others do not, is not random. Natural Selection Review • Variation in traits • Differential reproduction • Heredity • The more advantageous trait which allows the organism to have more offspring becomes more common in the population Your thoughts: What is artificial selection? Initial Model • Draw and describe your ideas on how modern corn came to be on your worksheet Artificial Selection • • • Researchers start with phenotype (rows of kernels per ear, number of ears per plant) Then, look for associations between particular traits and particular sequences in the genome Target the gene for selection and breed for the beneficial trait (more kernels, more ears) How is the evolution of corn related to natural selection? Different Same Wild to modernhow do we get there? Wild sunflowers (left) and domestic sunflowers (right) Wild tomatoes (left) and domestic tomatoes (right) Teosinte plant (left) and corn plants (right) Bottleneck What is this saying about genes in domestic crops versus their wild counterparts? Why do we care about artificial selection? • Answer the questions about farming with a friend Is artificial selection good? • Examine the article about foxes Are humans being artificially selected? How or how not? • Support your ideas and present your hypothesis with a partner or two