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Descent with Modification I. A. 1. 2. 3. B. 1. 2. 3. 4. Descent with Modification Unity of life All organisms are related Organisms have descended from ancestral species Adaptations a. Modifications resulting over time as descendants inhabit differing environments Metaphor depiction of history of life—“Tree” Tips are contemporary Branch points represent ancestors or evolutionary lines Most branch points are dead Closely related organisms share recent branch points Terms and Concepts: II. Natural selection—inferences and observations A. Observations: 1. If all individuals reproduced successfully, populations would grow exponentially a. All species have a great potential fertility 2. Populations tend to remain constant a. Despite tremendous reproductive capacity, population size remains constant 3. Resources are limited B. Inference 1: Over production of individuals leads to competition for limited resources with only a limited number of individuals surviving C. 1. 2. D. Observations Individual characteristics within a population vary extensively a. All individuals within a population differ Variation is heritable a. Most variability can be passed to subsequent generation b. Excludes traits acquired during individuals lifetime Inference 2: Survival depends on the heritable constitution of surviving individuals—individuals with inherited traits best suited for their environment are more likely to produce offspring E. Inference 3: The differences in ability to survive and reproduce lead to a gradual change in a population, with favorable characteristics accumulating over generations This is Descent with Modification. The mechanism for this modification has been the cumulative effect of natural selection over extended periods of time. III. A. 1. 2. B. 1. C. 1. 2. D. 1. 2. 3. Conditions for Natural Selection Variation and Overproduction Resources limitations usually are apparent only there is more demand than supply a. Plentiful resources exclude need for competition i. Therefore no selection Without diversity, even with limiting resources, selection would not occur Fit genes are generally passed on Over time, environment favors certain variations that promote survival a. Variations are optimal for some but not all environments i. Adaptation under one condition may be useless or even deleterious under different conditions Change occurs gradually—Gradualism Advantages of some heritable traits are slight a. Traits accumulate over generations Evolution of life did not occur rapidly with dramatic change a. Gradual accumulation of small changes Individuals do not evolve Individuals interact with their environment Individuals adapt to their environments These changes are not heritable a. Only traits carried by gametes can be passed on Population Evolution I. A. 1. B. 1. C. 1. 2. 3. 4. Background Population Characteristics a. Group of interbreeding members of a species b. Share common geographical area Species A group of populations whose individuals have the capacity to interbreed and produce fertile offspring a. Not evenly distributed b. Population centers c. Gene flow may occur between population centers Gene pool Aggregate of all alleles for all genes in a population at a given time Genes consist of alleles Number of alleles a. Diploid b. Two alleles for each gene i. Homozygote ii. Heterozygote There are generally two or more types of alleles for each gene a. Each allele has a relative frequency in the gene pool II. A. 1. Quantifying Allelic Frequency—Hardy-Weinberg Theorem Theoretical description of allelic frequency in non-evolving populations Mathematical relationship a. Hardy-Weinberg equation *Class discussion will include the derivation and use of this equation III. A. 1. 2. Microevolution Definition Generation to generation change in a population’s allelic or genotypic frequencies H-W equilibrium assumes nonevolving populations a. Differences observed represent evolutionary departures b. Differences in gene poopl is a very small scale i. Microevolution B. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Conditions that must be met to maintain Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium: Large populations Isolation of populations No net mutations Random mating No natural selection C. 1. Causes of Microevolution Genetic drift: change in gene pool of small populations due to chance a. Bottleneck effect i. Non-selective death of members of a small population ii. Reduction in population size iii. Survival is random iv. Remaining population has a genetic makeup that differs from original population b. Founder effect i. Results from colonization ii. Genetic makeup of founding population of new colony differs from that of the original population Gene flow a. Migration of fertile individuals between populations b. Transfers gametes c. Reduces inter-population differences d. Offsets the effects of genetic drift or natural selection Mutation a. Must occur in gametes to affect microevolution b. Little quantitative effect in large population i. 1 mutation/106 gametes c. Original source of genetic variation Nonrandom mating a. Increases homozygous loci but does not alter allelic frequency b. Types i. Inbreeding ii. Assortative mating c. Inbreeding i. Individuals are more likely to mate with close neighbors ii. Changes genotypic frequencies but not allelic iii. Reduces number of heterozygotes 2. 3. 4. d. 5. Assortative mating i. Individuals mate with partners possessing similar phenotypes Natural selection a. Variation among individuals favor particular individuals b. These individuals are more likely to produce offspring c. Alleles are passed on in disproportionate numbers to those of the current generation d. The process is adaptive i. Favorable genotypes accumulate IV. A. 1. 2. 3. Sources of Genetic Variation Background Variation is required for natural selection Subtle genetic differences underlying variation makes natural selection possible Variation can occur within or between populations a. Product of genetics and environmental influences i. Only genetic components are adaptive ii. Only genetic components are affected by natural selection B. 1. 2. 3. Variation within populations Variations affects the character states (traits) seen within a population Characters can be either quantitative or discrete Polygenetic characters vary quantitatively a. Trait is controlled by multiple loci b. Contribute most to inheritable variation c. Example i. Height Discrete characters are controlled by a single locus a. Different alleles produce distinct phenotypes Polymorphism a. Two or more different forms—morphs are present in significant frequencies in a population b. Morph i. Contrasting character state c. Not limited to physical traits i. Cellular and biochemical substrates also exist in multiple character states ii. Require advanced scientific tools to be distinguished 4. 5. C. 1. 2. 3. Variation between populations Variation seen between two or more populations of a given species Geographical variation a. Environmental factors differ between areas inhabited by populations b. Genetic drift may cause variation among different species Cline a. Some variables may be graded i. Eg., Incremental temperature differences in neighboring geographical regions b. Genetic variation will parallel differences seen along the cline D. 1. 2. 3. 4. E. 1. Mutation Random changes in genetic composition of a population a. Negligible contribution to genetic variation Produce new alleles a. Generally occur in somatic cells i. Not heritable b. Only mutations in cell lines giving rise to gametes generate heritable genetic variation Types of mutations a. Point i. Affect a single base in DNA ii. Generally have little effect iii. Effects if realized are usually deleterious b. Chromosomal i. Affect multiple loci ii. Generally not beneficial Mutation produces variation in organisms with short generational time a. Allelic frequency of mutation locus can change rapidly i. Asexually reproducing microorganisms 2. Sexual recombination Nearly all genetic variation results from the sexual recombination of existing alleles a. Random segregation and independent assortment during meiosis b. Crossing-over during prophase I of meiosis c. Random fertilization Zygotes possess new combinations of existing alleles VI. A. 1. Preserving Variation Natural selection reduces genetic variability Selects individuals with particular traits that favor survival B. 1. Mechanisms that preserve variability Diploidy a. Recessive alleles are preserved in the heterozygote state i. Recessive alleles are often less favorable or sometimes harmful b. The more rare the allele the greater proportion hidden by the dominant allele Balanced polymorphism a. Natural selection preserves variations at some gene loci b. Heterozygote advantage i. Heterozygote has greater reproductive success than either homozygote (e.g., sickle-cell anemia) c. Frequency-dependent selection i. Reproductive success of any one morph decreases if its phenotype becomes too common ((e.g., papilio dardanus) Neutral variation a. Some genetic variations confer no advantage or disadvantage i. Relative frequencies of neutral alleles not affected by natural selection 2. 3. V. A. 1. 2. 3. Mechanisms of Adaptive Evolution: Natural Selection Background Adaptive evolution results from the combined effect of chance events that cause genetic variation and natural selection that favors some variations over others Evolutionary fitness a. Relative contribution an individual makes to the gene pool of the next generation i. Measured by the number of progeny produced--fecundity b. Factors affecting fecundity i. Reproductive lifespan ii. Survival Effect of selection a. Stabilizing selection i. Favors intermediates as opposed to extreme phenotypes ii. Reduces phenotypic variation iii. Best suited when environmental conditions are stable b. Directional selection i. Favors variants of one extreme ii. Shifts frequency curve toward rare variants iii. Occurs during periods of environmental change c. Diversifying selection i. Opposite phenotypic extremes are favored over intermediate phenotypes Mechanisms of Evolution I. A. 1. 2. B. 1. 2. 3. C. 1. Speciation Types Anagenesis a. Transformation of an unbranched lineage of organisms to a state different from the ancestral population i. Basis for naming a new species Cladogenesis a. Budding of one or more new species from a parent species that continues to exist b. More common pattern of speciation c. Produces more biological diversity Biological species concept Characteristics a. Population whose members have the potential to interbreed i. Must be in nature b. Breeding results in the production of viable and fertile offspring c. Cannot produce viable, fertile offspring with other species Species is the largest unit of a population where gene flow is possible Biological species are reproductively isolated from other species in nature Other types of species Species can be conceptualized by other means a. Morphology b. Ecology c. Evolution d. Characteristics that maximize successful mating II. A. 1. 2. 3. Factors that Cause Reproductive Isolation Background For discrete species to exist each must be reproductively isolated Most species are isolated by more than a single type of barrier Types of barriers a. Prezygotic i. Impede mating or fertilization ii. Intrinsic b. Postzygotic i. Prevent hybrid from developing into a viable, fertile adult ii. Intrinsic c. Geographic B. Prezygotic barriers a. Habitat isolation i. Two species live in different habitats within the same geographical range ii. Rarely encounter each other iii. Technically not geographically isolated b. Behavioral i. Species-species signals and behavior that attract mates ii. Pheromones, song, etc. c. Temporal isolation i. Two different species breed at different times of the day, season or years d. Mechanical isolation i. Anatomical incompatibility ii. Prevent sperm transfer e. Gamete isolation i. Gametes either do not survive to meet or lack gamete recognition C. Postzygotic barriers a. Reduced hybrid vigor i. Hybrid development is aborted during embryological development ii. If hybrid survives embryological development, it is frail and soon dies b. Reduced hybrid fertility i. Hybrid is viable, but sterile ii. Gene flow between gene pools is not possible iii. Meiosis does not generate normal gametes c. Hybrid breakdown i. First generation hybrids are viable and fertile ii. Subsequent generations are feeble or sterile III. A. 1. Modes of Speciation Background For a new species to arise, first need a reproductive barrier a. Gene pool of one population is separated from the populations of the parent species b. Isolated population can now follow its own evolutionary path i. Allelic frequencies can change by selection, genetic drift and mutation B. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. C. 1. 2. 3. 4. IV. A. 1. Allopatric speciation New species result from geographical isolation Geographical barrier physically isolates the population a. Gene flow is not possible i. Isolated gene pools accumulate differences by microevolution ii. Populations diverge phenotypically Examples a. Emergence of new mountain ranges b. Movement of glaciers c. Formation of land bridges Conditions that favor allopatric speciation a. Isolated population is small b. Geographic isolation occurs at the fringe of the parent population’s range i. Peripheral isolate Characteristics of peripheral isolates that favor speciation a. Gene pool of the peripheral isolate probably differs subtly from the parent population b. Genetic drift will continue to cause changes in the gene pool of the peripheral isolate c. Evolution is likely to affect the isolate in a different way than the parent population Sympatric speciation Species arise within the geographical range of the parent population a. Speciation occurs without geographical isolation Chance genetic change creates a reproductive barrier a. Rapid process i. Occurs within a single generation Improper cell division creates an extra set of chromosomes a. Polyploidy Source of chromosomes determines what type of polyploidy has occurred a. Autopolyploid i. All sets of chromosomes are derived from a single species ii. Diploid gametes are formed by non-disjunction during cell division iii. Self-fertilization would create a tetraploid that could mate with other tetraploids iv. Tetraploids cannot mate with diploids v. 3n progeny are sterile due to impaired meiosis b. Allopolyploid i. Hybrid results from chromosomes contributed by two different species ii. Hybrids are usually sterile but in some species asexual reproduction is possible iii. Mechanisms exist that transform sterile allopolyploids into fertile polyploids Sources of Evolution Novelty Modification of existing structures Exaptation a. Gradual refinement of existing structures for new function b. Structure that evolved in one context is co-opted for another function c. Novel designs arise gradually i. Intermediate forms each having some function d. Natural selection does not anticipate future i. Improves an existing structure in context of its current utility ii. Improvement contributes to later modification (e.g., honeycombed bones of birds) B. 1. 2. 3. Modification of genes controlling development Development requires the action of regulatory genes that control the timing and rate of growth Modifying the function of these genes will have dynamic effects on the adult form Allometric growth a. Differences in relative growth rates of different body parts b. Slight changes affect adult form dramatically 4. Heterochrony a. Temporal changes that give rise to evolutionary novelty b. Changing the timing or rate of the development of structures changes their adult form (e.g., human brain) Paedomorphosis a. Retention of ancestral juvenile structures in sexually mature adult Homeosis a. Alteration of the spacial pattern of development b. Alteration in placement of different body parts 5. 6.