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: I can analyze and evaluate how natural selection produces change in populations, not individuals; I can analyze and evaluate how the elements of natural selection, including inherited variation, the potential of a population to produce more offspring than can survive, and a finite supply of environmental resources, result in differential reproductive success (7C); I can analyze and evaluate the relationship of natural selection to adaptation and to the development of diversity in and among species; and I can analyze and evaluate the effects of other evolutionary mechanisms, including genetic drift, gene flow, mutation, and recombination Evolution is the change in the development of organisms over a long period of time. Evolution can occur due to any of the following mechanisms: ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ Natural selection Genetic drift Gene flow Mutation “The only thing constant in life is change” ◦ ― François de La Rochefoucauld (1809- 1882) An English scientist Considered the father of evolution. It took him years of observation and study to develop his theory of natural selection. Wrote the book, On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection He began in 1831 at age 22 when he took a job as a naturalist on the English ship HMS Beagle, which sailed around the world on a five-year scientific journey. Darwin studied and collected biological and fossil specimens at every port along the route. Darwin and Natural Selection • On the Galápagos Islands, Darwin studied many species of animals and plants that are unique to the islands but similar to species on the mainland. • These observations led Darwin to consider the possibility that species can change over time, especially if exposed to different environments where they must adapt to different things. • He became curious about possible relationships among species because of similarities he saw. One of the things Darwin observed is that in nature, the traits of individuals vary in populations. Give some examples of variations of traits in populations. Darwin hypothesized that there was a force in nature that picked the traits which are better for survival in a species. • • He also observed that individuals struggle to compete in changing environmental conditions. What do individuals compete for? What is a population? What is the difference between populations and individuals? What is natural selection? Organism – any living thing Species – an organism that can successfully reproduce and produce viable offspring Population – Same species in the same location at the same time Community – Different populations in the same place at the same time Ecosystem – Communities and the surrounding abiotic (nonliving) factors Natural Selection – the process by which traits or alleles become more or less frequent in a population, depending on the advantage or disadvantage they confer on the survival and reproduction of the organism occurs when certain organisms with certain variations survive, reproduce, and pass their variations to the next generation. Also known as “survival of the fittest” Proposed by Charles Darwin 1. In any population, individuals have variations in traits.(Ex. coloring, speed, size) 2. There is differential reproduction (fitness). Organisms produce more offspring than can survive….to ensure survival of the species. Not all organisms will live to reproduce. (Ex. eaten by a predator) 2. Fitness – REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS includes an organism’s ability to survive, find a mate, produce offspring — and ultimately leave its genes in the next generation. 3. There is heredity. • • • Some variations are more beneficial than others. The individuals with those beneficial traits will be the ones that survive, reproduce, and pass those favorable variations on to the next generation. Individuals without those favorable traits are less likely to survive and reproduce. 4. The more advantageous trait becomes more common in the population. • After generations, organisms with the favorable variation make up most of the population. • The allele for the unfavorable traits may eventually cease to exist. Those organisms best adapted to the environment will survive and pass on their favorable traits. Environments are affected by limiting factors -Any factor (physical or biological) which regulates the welfare of an organism Examples of limiting factors are disease, competition, predation, environmental change, etc. Graph of survival curves ("survival function estimates") of children without any sickle cell genes (HbAA), children with sickle cell trait (HbAS), and children with sickle cell disease (HbSS). Those who had the sickle cell trait (HbAS) had a slight survival advantage over those without any sickle cell genes (HbAA), with children with sickle cell disease (HbSS) faring the worst. Reference: Protective Effects of the Sickle Cell Gene Against Malaria Morbidity and Mortality. Aidoo M, Terlouw DJ, Kolczak MS, McElroy PD, ter Kuile FO, Kariuki S, Nahlen BL, Lal AA, Udhayakumar V. Lancet 2002; 359:1311-1312. http://www.cdc.gov/malaria/about/biology/sickle_cell.html Which traits of each organism shown below would allow for natural selection? Example of Natural Selection – “survival of the fittest” Why do you think more and more bad bacteria (like the kind that cause sinus infections) are becoming resistant to anti-biotics? How do you think natural selection will affect this species of moth? both the same species, just have a body color variation) Evolution and natural selection are not the same thing. Natural selection results in differential reproductive success. Differential reproductive success is a situation in which traits that help a species survive change, and the resulting biological changes are passed on to future generations. Three types of Natural Selection Directional ◦ Allele frequencies shift to favor individuals at one extreme of the normal range Only one side of the distribution reproduce Population looks different over time Stabilizing ◦ Favors individuals with an average genetic makeup Only the middle reproduce Population looks more similar over time (elim. extremes) Disruptive (aka Diversifying) ◦ Environmental conditions favor individuals at both ends of the genetic spectrum Population split into two groups Stabilizing Selection ◦ Intermediate forms of a trait are favored ◦ Favors average individuals in a population ◦ Alleles that specify extreme forms are eliminated from a population ◦ EX: Birth Weight and Clutch Size Example: human birth weight. Babies of low weight lose heat more quickly and get ill from infectious disease more easily, whereas babies of large body weight are more difficult to deliver through the pelvis Disruptive Selection ◦ Both forms at extreme ends are favored ◦ Intermediate forms are eliminated ◦ Bill size in African finches I can determine the result of disruptive selection … • In disruptive selection, individuals with both extremes of a trait’s variation are selected for. • This results in eventually having no intermediate form of a trait, and leading to two separate species. Directional Selection ◦ Shift in allele frequency in a consistent direction ◦ With directional selection, allele frequencies tend to shift in response to directional changes in the environment Phenotypic Variation in a population of butterflies I can determine the result of directional selection … • Directional selection occurs when natural selection favors one of the extreme variations of a trait. • This type of selection can lead to rapid evolution of a population. Examples of Directional Selection: Peppered Moths: as the environment changes, so do the traits that are fit for the new environment. In the case of the moths, the forests changed from light to dark and selection moved in the direction of darker moths Antibiotic Resistance Pesticide Resistance Tortoise neck length ◦ Short grasses, for short-necked tortoises ◦ Tall grasses, for long-necked tortoises ◦ No grasses for average-necked tortoises, so over time, they are selected against Disruptive Selection Lizard body size: ◦ Large lizards are easily seen by predators, but smaller lizards cannot run as fast to escape the predators ◦ Mid sized lizards are most fit in the environment, so they survive and reproduce more often, changing the allele frequencies in the population Anteater tongue length: ◦ Anteaters with long tongues are most fit because of the depth of the nests of the termites they eat. If different populations develop widely different traits, they may gradually become different species. In this way, natural selection contributes to the development of diversity in and among species. Industrial revolution ◦ Pollution darkened tree trunks Camouflage of moths increases survival from predators Directional selection caused a shift away from light-gray towards dark-gray moths Fig. 18.5, p. 287 An adaptation is any variation in traits that aids an organism’s chances of survival in its environment. Examples are: ◦ Thorns on plants ◦ Special colorings for an organism ◦ Enhanced night vision Mimicry is an adaptation that enables one species to resemble another species. In one form of mimicry, a harmless species has adaptations that result in a physical resemblance to a harmful species. Another subtle adaptation is camouflage, an adaptation that enables species to blend with their surroundings. Because well-camouflaged organisms are not easily found by predators, they survive to reproduce. Limits to adaptation: ◦ A change in the environment can only lead to adaptation for traits already present in the gene pool ◦ Reproductive capacity may limit a population’s ability to adapt If you reproduce quickly (insects, bacteria) then your population can adapt to changes in a short time If you reproduce slowly (elephants, tigers, corals) then it takes thousands or millions of years to adapt through natural selection ◦ Most individuals without trait would have to die in order for the trait to predominate and be passed on When faced with a change in environmental condition, a population of a species can get MAD: ◦ MIGRATE to a more favorable location ◦ ALREADY be adapted ◦ DIE Natural selection can only act on inherited alleles already present in the population— do not think that the environment creates favorable heritable characteristics! Soooo….how do new alleles arise?????? Changes in the structure of the DNA Adds genetic diversity to the population May or may not be adaptive ◦ Depends on the environment! The change in a POPULATION’S genetic makeup (gene pool) over time (successive generations) ◦ Those with selective advantages (i.e., adaptations), survive and reproduce ◦ All species descended from earlier ancestor species Small genetic changes in a population such as the spread of a mutation or the change in the frequency of a single allele due to selection (changes to gene pool) ◦ Not possible without genetic variability in a pop… Inherited variation (diversity in gene frequency) If the genetic traits are favorable for reproduction and survival of the population, those traits will be more frequent in the population through successive generationsthe genes will appear more in the population’s gene pool – the gene frequency will increase. Changes in a population’s gene pool over time. ◦ Genetic variability within a population is the catalyst Four Processes cause evolution ◦ Mutation (random changes in DNA—ultimate source of new alleles) [stop little] Exposure to mutagens or random mistakes in copying Random/unpredictable relatively rare ◦ Natural Selection (more fit = more offspring) ◦ Gene flow (movement of genes between pop’s) ◦ Genetic drift (change in gene pool due to random/chance events) Gene Flow ◦ Flow of alleles Emigration and immigration of individuals Genetic Drift ◦ Random change in allele frequencies over generations brought about by chance ◦ In the absence of other forces, drift leads to loss of genetic diversity Elephant seals, cheetahs Genes move with individuals when they move (emigrate or immigrate) into and out of a population…and it changes the gene pool Genetic Drift – the random fluctuation in allele frequencies over time, due to chance occurrences alone It is more significant in smaller populations It increases the chance of any given allele becoming more or less prevalent when the number of individuals is small Founder Effect Magnitude of drift is greatest in small populations SPECIATION • The evolution of new species is called speciation. • This occurs when members of similar populations change so much from each other that they no longer interbreed to produce fertile/viable offspring. SPECIATION with a physical barrier • In nature, physical barriers can break large populations into smaller ones. • Geographic isolation occurs whenever a physical barrier divides a population and over time they change and become two different species. SPECIATION without a physical barrier • Some speciation occurs while the organisms still exist in the same area. •Behavioral, Temporal, Mechanical Northern population Early fox population Spreads northward and southward and separates Arctic Fox Different environmental conditions lead to different selective pressures and evolution into two different species. Southern population Gray Fox Adapted to cold through heavier fur, short ears, short legs, short nose. White fur matches snow for camouflage. Adapted to heat through lightweight fur and long ears, legs, and nose, which give off more heat. Current debate: Does speciation happen gradually or rapidly? Or both? ◦ Gradualism ◦ Punctuated equilibrium Gradual change over long spans of time assume that big changes occur as the accumulation of many small ones develop over time. Rate of speciation is not constant ◦ rapid bursts of change ◦ long periods of no change ◦ species undergo rapid change when they 1st bud from parent population Time Types of Change • Divergent evolution is when species that are similar and closely related become increasingly different from each other. THEY DIVERGE This is also called Adaptive Radiation….because it has to do with ADAPTING to different environments and RADIATING out into different species. Types of Change • When distantly-related organisms evolve to become more similar, it is called convergent evolution. • Convergent evolution occurs when unrelated species occupy similar environments in different parts of the world. of two or more forms of a gene that • Alleles: One code for different versions of the same trait. •Genotype: The genetic combination of two alleles, which decides what a person’s trait will be (ex. Bb) • Phenotype: The physical expression of a genetic trait (ex. Bb means Brown eyes) B=brown b=blonde Picture all of the alleles of a population as being together in a large pool called a gene pool. The percentage of any specific allele in the gene pool is called the allelic frequency. Look around the room…. What is the gene pool for hair color??? What is the allelic frequency of people with blonde hair? GENETICS AND EVOLUTION • Evolution occurs as a population’s genes and their frequencies change over time. •This can take millions of years for a species to change GENETICS AND EVOLUTION • A population in which the frequency of alleles remains the same over generations as being in genetic equilibrium. • A population that is in genetic equilibrium is NOT evolving or changing. “Evolution is simply a change in frequencies of alleles in the gene pool over time.” The definition of evolution was developed in the early 20th century by Godfrey Hardy, an English mathematician, and Wilhelm Weinberg, a German physician. Hardy Weinberg