* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Phylogeny
Adaptive evolution in the human genome wikipedia , lookup
Human genetic variation wikipedia , lookup
Hybrid (biology) wikipedia , lookup
Dual inheritance theory wikipedia , lookup
Pharmacogenomics wikipedia , lookup
History of genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Inbreeding avoidance wikipedia , lookup
Genome-wide association study wikipedia , lookup
Quantitative trait locus wikipedia , lookup
Group selection wikipedia , lookup
Polymorphism (biology) wikipedia , lookup
Koinophilia wikipedia , lookup
Genetic drift wikipedia , lookup
Population genetics wikipedia , lookup
Microevolution wikipedia , lookup
Evolution: Change over time; the process by which modern organisms have descended from ancient organisms ∆ 𝒄𝒉𝒂𝒏𝒈𝒆 = 𝒕𝒊𝒎𝒆 𝒕 Tiktaalik: Transitional fossil DNA: Take a minute and write down everything you know about DNA End Chromosomes: Take a minute and write down everything you know about Chromosomes End Inheritance: Take a minute and write down everything you know about how traits are inherited End Genes & Alleles Take a minute and write down everything you know about genes and alleles End Phenotype and Genotype Take a minute and write down everything you know about phenotype and genotype End Phylogeny And the evolution of plants Phylogeny Evolutionary species history of a What is a plant? All Land Plants (Embryophytes): Alternation of Generations Roots & Shoots Cuticle (prevents water loss) Bryophytes: Mosses, Liverworts and Hornwarts What No makes them special? vascular tissue Can’t Need No transport nutrients -> limited size water to reproduce seeds Nonvascular Plants Time Mosses, liverworts, hornworts (vascular tissue) Ancestral Algae (Autotroph) Vascular Plants Ferns: Seedless Vascular Plants What makes them special? No seeds Need water to reproduce Time Mosses, liverworts, hornworts Seeded Vascular Plants Ferns (Seeds) (vascular tissue) Ancestral Algae (Autotroph) Gymnosperm (conifers, gingkoes, cycads) What makes them special? Wind pollination, Seeds, No flowers Mosses, liverworts, hornworts Ferns Gymnosperm Angiosperm Time Flowers, (Seeds) (vascular tissue) Ancestral Algae (Autotroph) Angiosperm (Flowering Plants) What makes them special? Flowers- pollination by animals Double fertilization Seed doesn't develop w/out pollination Modeling Phylogenetic Trees Ferns Gymnosperm Time Mosses, liverworts, hornworts Angiosperm Look at the Nodes Ancestral Algae Any of the branches can be rotated at the nodes: Mosses, Ferns Angiosperm Time liverworts, hornworts Gymnosperm Look at the Nodes Ancestral Algae Are Angiosperm more closely related to Ferns, or to mosses/liverworts and hornworts? Gymnosperm Time Ferns Ferns Angiosperm Mosses, liverworts, hornworts Are Ferns more closely related to Angiosperm, or to Gymosperm? Angiosperm Ferns Time Gymnosperm Mosses, liverworts, hornworts Neither: They are equally related Tree of Life Tree of Life Bonus Opportunity Fantasy Phylogeny Create a phylogenetic tree of fantasy creatures Include at least 5 creatures Include descriptions of creatures Describe characteristic that is associated with each node (example: seeds, vascular tissue in plants) Lizard Lab 3 Parts- must be done sequentially. When you complete part 1, return that handout and pickup the next. Turn in at end of class- we will be working on them next class also. They are due on _____ Evolution: A more technical definition the change in allele frequency __________ in a population, time over _________. Mechanisms of Evolution Mutation Change in the DNA code “Instant Evolution” Almost always harmful. Why? Mechanisms of Evolution Migration Movement of organisms in or out of a population Changes allele frequency Mechanisms of Evolution Drift Genetic _________which is a sampling _______ error. Founder Effect ____________in which a population is isolated from the parent population. This new population is a random sample of the original, containing different Allele frequencies ______________ Mechanisms of Evolution Drift Genetic _________which Bottleneck Effect ___________ sampling is a ______ error. in which a population declines rapidly, so that only a small number of members remains. The remaining members are essentially a random sample ___________, and have different Allele frequencies ______________ than the parent population. Mechanisms of Evolution Bottleneck Effect ___________ Cheetahs ______ underwent this. The 99 population shares ____% of their DNA- they are more closely related than most _____. siblings Mechanisms of Evolution Natural____________ Selection was proposed by ______ Charles Darwin ______ _____ in The Origin of Species. Conditions: There must be variation _______ heritable variation The ________must be ________ More are born ____ than will _________. survive Some variations ________ survive better than others. Mechanisms of Evolution ______ Natural___________ Selection increases __________, fitness which is measured in the number of offspring an individual has, relative to other members of its species.. Definitions: Genotype vs Phenotype Genotype: What your genes are; 2 alleles Phenotype: What you look like; your appearance Genotype or Phenotype? The bunny has brown fur… Phenotype Genotype or Phenotype? Lucy is a carrier for X-linked color blindness. Genotype Genotype or Phenotype? The flowers are pink. Phenotype Genotype or Phenotype? The plants are short Phenotype Definitions: Dominant & Recessive Dominant: Represented by a capital letter Single copy determines the trait “overrides” other alleles Recessive: Represented by a lower-case letter Can be “masked” Dominant or Recessive Recessive The It “O” in blood types may be helpful to know that an individual with an AO genotype has type A, and an individual with BO has type B, while an individual with OO has blood type O Dominant or Recessive If Dominant an individual inherits even a single copy of the allele associated with Huntington’s disease, the individual will develop the disease. Dominant or Recessive Recessive Brown-eyed parents sometimes have blue-eyed children. Is the blue eyed allele dominant, or recessive? Definitions: Homozygous & Heterozygous Homozygous: Homo- prefix meaning same Refers to an organism with 2 identical copies of an allele. Example: AA or aa Heterozygous Hetero- prefix meaning different Refers to an organism with 2 different alleles Example: Aa A) homozygous dominant… B) homozygous recessive… C) heterozygous…? AA Homozygous dominant A) homozygous dominant… B) homozygous recessive… C) heterozygous…? Aa Heterozygous A) homozygous dominant… B) homozygous recessive… C) heterozygous…? An Heterozygous individual is a carrier for sickle cell disease A) homozygous dominant… B) homozygous recessive… C) heterozygous…? An individual with O blood type. Homozygous recessive Write the genotype: Homozygous (use dominant ‘A’ and ‘a’ to represent the alleles) AA Write the genotype: An individual with blue eyes. Use ’B’ and ‘b’ to represent the alleles bb Write the genotype: Mary has type A, blood type, but her father had type O. AO Hardy-Weinberg Principle stating that _______ allele frequencies do not change _____ unless there is a factor causing change Principle Hardy-Weinberg Principle Assumes: Large population No Migration Random Mating No Mutations No Selection Hardy-Weinberg Principle Equations: 𝑝+𝑞 =1 Where 𝑝 is: frequency of the dominant allele Where 𝑞 is: frequency of the recessive allele Hardy-Weinberg Principle Equations: Where 𝑝 2 2 2 𝑝 + 2𝑝𝑞 + 𝑞 = 1 is: frequency of homozygous dominant genotype in population Where 𝑞2 is: Where 2𝑝𝑞 is: frequency of homozygous recessive genotype & phenotype in population genotype in population frequency of heterozygous Hardy-Weinberg Principle Video on how to solve HardyWeinberg problems If the frequency of the dominant allele is .3 What is the frequency of the recessive allele? Given: 𝑝 = .3 Equation: 𝑝+𝑞 =1 𝑞 =1−𝑝 𝑞 = 1 − .3 𝑞 = .7 If the frequency of the 𝑝 = .3 dominant allele is .3 𝑞 = .7 What percentage of the population will be heterozygous Equation: for the trait? 𝑝2 + 2𝑝𝑞 + 𝑞2 = 1 Calculate 2pq 2𝑝𝑞 = 2 ∙ .3 ∙ (.7) 2𝑝𝑞 = .42 So, 42% olve: The frequency of the homozygous recessive genotype is 0.09. In a population of 1000, how many would have the dominant phenotype ? Find: Given: 𝑞 = .09 𝑝 = .91 1000 ∗ (2𝑝𝑞 + 𝑝2 ) = 1000 ∗ (2 (.09)(.91) + (.91)2 ) =9938 Solve: If the frequency of two alleles in a gene pool is 90% A and 10% a, what is the frequency of individuals in the population Find: 2𝑝𝑞 = Given: with the genotype Aa? 2 .9 . 1) = .18 𝑝 = .9 𝑞 = .1 Solve: In humans, Rh-positive individuals have the Rh antigen on their red blood cells, while Rh-negative individuals do not. If the Rh-positive phenotype is produced by a dominant gene (A), and the Rh-negative phenotype is due to its recessive allele (a), what is the frequency of the Rh-positive allele if 84% of a population is Rhpositive? Given: Find: 2𝑝𝑞 + 𝑝2 = .84 𝑝2 + 2𝑝𝑞 + 𝑞2 = 1 𝑞2 = 1-(𝑝2 + 2𝑝𝑞) 𝑞2 = 1-.84 𝑞2 = .16 𝑞2 = .16 𝑞 = .4 𝑝= 𝑝= 𝑝+𝑞 =1 Linking HW to Genetic Drift Bozeman Bio: https://youtu.be/mjQ_y N5znyk?t=63 Problem 1- first set of Hardy-Weinberg Problems Types of Natural Selection Directional selection Stabilizing selection Individuals with intermediate phenotypes are the most fit Disruptive selection Individuals with one extreme of the range of variation have higher fitness Individuals with extreme phenotypes are the most fit Sexual Selection Directional Selection Stabilizing Selection Disruptive Selection Sexual Selection Any one of the other three Increases fitness often at the cost of longevity A) Directional B) Stabilizing C)Disruptive Human birth weight What is a Species Biological Species Concept: A species is… Members of a population that can interbreed, producing viable and fertile offspring Prezygotic vs Postzygotic Isolation Bozeman Biology on Speciation (skip peri/parapatric- skip to 4:35) Speciation Allopatric Sympatric