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Living Environment Student Work BSC Lesson #18 Lesson 18. Gene Frequency & Evolution Name: Period ______ Laboratory Experience ## Worth ### Lab Minutes Date : Bridge Evolution will dictate a change in gene frequencies. When a variation, caused by either recombination or mutation, occurs in an organism, it may provide a survival advantage. That advantage usually results in a structural or behavioral change that will help an organism compete for resources better. Predict some structural and behavioral changes we might see in organisms as they try to out compete those in their niche. Objective: Understand and represent the change in gene frequency in response to environmental changes through models Essential Question: How can the environment affect gene expression and cause a change in gene frequency? Mini Lesson Changes in gene frequency (how often a gene shows up in a population) is often the result of environmental pressures. If there is a change in the environment, often organisms will start to die off or find ways to deal with that change. Some changes are small: an increase in the pH of a lake or soil by 0.01 or an increase in temperature by 1ºF. Other changes are drastic, like the impact of an asteroid that caused the extinction of the dinosaurs or the eruption of a volcano that has lain dormant for thousands of years. No matter the change, nature will respond. Page |1 Living Environment Student Work BSC Lesson #18 Work Period Below are different activities that deal with these environmental pressures. As you go through them, focus on how there was a shift in genes over a period of time. Represent each of these as a graph. Stickleback Evolution: http://learn.genetics.utah.edu/content/variation/stickleback/ Rock Pocket Mice: http://learn.genetics.utah.edu/content/variation/comparative/ Paramecium Virtual Lab: http://glencoe.mcgrawhill.com/sites/dl/free/0078759864/383928/BL_04.html Peppered Moth Simulation: http://www.techapps.net/interactives/pepperMoths.swf What happened to the gene frequencies of the favored genes in each of the activities? Did the favored populations grow indefinitely? Why or why not? Summary How can the environment affect gene expression and cause a change in gene frequency? Closing Sometimes gene expression is affected directly by the environment an organism lives in. We saw a glimpse of this with the activity and skin color: people that live near the equator have an advantage if they have darker skin color and the further you get from the equator the shift is to lighter skin color. Snowshoe hares are an example of this kind of gene expression. In the summer months, snowshoe hares are brown and in the winter months they turn white. During spring and fall, they are a combination of both colors. But these bunnies actually started out being either brown or white. Page |2 Living Environment Student Work BSC Lesson #18 1. Explain the adaptive value of these rabbits being able to change color based on their environment. 2. Explain how the gene frequency of all three populations of rabbits changed over time (both in words and as a graph) Page |3 Living Environment Student Work Name: BSC Lesson #18 Period ______ Date : Independent Practice Regents questions: There is one on experiment with bunny and ice pack One on change in pH of a bacteria population The one on the lotus plants (short answer) One on the bat population OR the rabbit population short answer where one is better adapted than the other. Page |4 Living Environment Student Work Name: BSC Lesson #18 Period ______ Date : Title of Lab: ______________________________________________________ Exploration Use this space to record observations that relate to the question being investigated. Also record researched facts that might relate to the investigation as well. Question Record your question that you will be investigating here. It is best to write it in a “Does __________________ affect ________________? Format so the variables are easy to identify (first line is always the independent variable, second line is always the dependent variable) Identify your Variables Independent Variable: Dependent Variable: Page |5 Living Environment Student Work BSC Lesson #18 Prediction/Hypothesis Based on the question that you asked, record your thoughts on what the result will be and why. Use the “I think ___________________________________, because ______________.” format. Experimental Design List the materials that you are going to use and the procedure (steps) you are going to take to test your hypothesis. Materials: Procedure: Data Collection Use this space to organize and collect your data. Remember, data can be qualitative (descriptions, words, observations) as well as quantitative (numbers, values). Use both kinds of data when you can. Organize your data into a table with a title, make a graph whenever you can, and use the variables to help you do this! Page |6 Living Environment Student Work BSC Lesson #18 Data Analysis Put your data into words. This will be a relationship of your variables: what happened to the dependent variable when you changed the independent variable? Evaluation This is where you talk about your experiment. Discuss how your results compare to your hypothesis: do you agree or disagree with your original thoughts and use evidence from your experiment to back this up. Second, discuss sources of error (at least 2), or things that could have gone wrong in your experiment. Finally, develop a further investigation question: based on what you found out in this experiment, what else do you wonder about? Again, use your “Does ________ affect __________” format for this question. Page |7