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Chapter 23- Evolution of populations Chapter 24Origin of species Blue edged slides taken from slide shows by: Kim Foglia http://www.explorebiology.com Individuals are selected Populations evolve AP Biology 2007-2008 REZNICK & ENGLER- (1980’s) Guppy experiments IMAGE FROM Campbell and Reece AP BIOLOGY Changes in populations happened within 11 years Age and size at sexual maturity change depending on predators Small killifish eat juvenile guppies Large pike-cichlids eat adult guppies Guppies in populations with pike-cichlid predators begin reproducing at a younger age and are smaller at maturity than guppies in populations preyed on by killifish IMAGE FROM Campbell and Reece AP BIOLOGY Moving guppies to pools with different predators changes size and age of maturity in population IMAGE FROM Campbell and Reece AP BIOLOGY Changes are heritable Changes in populations Pesticide molecule Resistant target site Target site Insect cell membrane Target site Decreased number of target sites Insecticide resistance AP Biology 2005-2006 Body size & egg laying in water striders Fitness Survival & Reproductive success AP Biology individuals with one phenotype leave more surviving offspring Variation & natural selection Variation is the raw material for natural selection there have to be differences within population some individuals must be more fit than others AP Biology Where does Variation come from? random changes to DNA errors in mitosis & meiosis Wet year Beak depth Mutation Dry year Dry year environmental damage 1977 Sex mixing of alleles recombination of alleles new arrangements in every offspring new combinations = new phenotypes spreads variation offspring inherit traits from parent AP Biology 1980 1982 1984 11 Beak depth of offspring (mm) Dry year 10 9 8 Medium ground finch 8 9 10 11 Mean beak depth of parents (mm) 5 Agents of evolutionary change Mutation Gene Flow Genetic Drift AP Biology Non-random mating Selection 1. Mutation & Variation Mutation creates variation new mutations are constantly appearing Mutation changes DNA sequence changes amino acid sequence? changes protein? changes structure? changes function? AP Biology changes in protein may change phenotype & therefore change fitness A diverse gene pool is important for the survival of a species in a changing environment Environments can more stable, less stable or fluctuating This affects evolutionary rate and direction Different genetic variations can be selected in each different generation AP Biology 2. Gene Flow Movement of individuals & alleles in & out of populations seed & pollen distribution by wind & insect migration of animals sub-populations may have different allele frequencies causes genetic mixing across regions reduce differences between populations AP Biology Human evolution today Gene flow in human populations is increasing today transferring alleles between populations Are we moving towards a blended world? AP Biology 3. Non-random mating Sexual selection AP Biology SEXUAL SELECTION Favors traits with no advantage for survival other than fact that males/females prefer them Leads to pronounced differences between sexes =SEXUAL DIMORPHISM http://informalfotos.com/Fauna/Male%20Peacock%20displaying.JPG http://www.distinctivecruises.com/AfricanSafaris/MaleFemaleLion.jpg http://espanol.wunderground.com/data/wximagenew/i/icmoore/1013.jpg Image from: http://www.kittens-lair.net/store/en/articles/sylvester4.jpg KIN SELECTION Natural selection that favors altruistic behavior by enhancing reproductive success of relatives Bird that calls to warn others is in danger of being eaten, but does it anyway. 4. Genetic drift Effect of chance events founder effect small group splinters off & starts a new colony bottleneck some factor (disaster) reduces population to small number & then population recovers & expands again AP Biology Reduction of genetic variation within a given population can increase the differences between populations of the same species. AP Biology Founder effect When a new population is started by only a few individuals some rare alleles may be at high frequency; others may be missing skew the gene pool of new population human populations that AP Biology started from small group of colonists example: colonization of New World Bottleneck effect When large population is drastically reduced by a disaster famine, natural disaster, loss of habitat… loss of variation by chance event alleles lost from gene pool not due to fitness narrows the gene pool AP Biology Cheetahs All cheetahs share a small number of alleles less than 1% diversity as if all cheetahs are identical twins 2 bottlenecks 10,000 years ago Ice Age last 100 years poaching & loss of habitat AP Biology Conservation issues Bottlenecking is an important Peregrine Falcon concept in conservation biology of endangered species loss of alleles from gene pool reduces variation reduces adaptability Breeding programs must consciously outcross AP Biology Golden Lion Tamarin 5. Natural selection Differential survival & reproduction due to changing environmental conditions climate change food source availability predators, parasites, diseases toxins combinations of alleles that provide “fitness” increase in the population adaptive evolutionary change AP Biology POLYGENIC traits are controlled by two or more genes. A bell shaped curve is typical of polygenic traits Graph from BIOLOGY by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publshing©2006 Graph from BIOLOGY by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publshing©2006 DIRECTIONAL SELECTION KEY Food becomes scarce. Low mortality, high fitness High mortality, low fitness Individuals at one end of the curve have higher fitness than individuals in middle or at other end. Graph shifts as some individuals fail to survive at one end and succeed and reproduce at other EXAMPLE OF DIRECTIONAL SELECTION Beak size varies in a population Birds with bigger beaks can feed more easily on harder, thicker shelled seeds. A food shortage causes small and medium size seeds to run low. Birds with bigger beaks would be selected for and increase in numbers in population. http://www.animalbehavior.org/ABS/Stars/ONI/Podos_-_finch_graphic.jpg Graph from BIOLOGY by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publshing©2006 STABILIZING SELECTION Individuals in center of the curve have higher fitness than individuals at either end Graph stays in same place but narrows as more organisms in middle are produced. STABILIZING SELECTION Section 16-2 Male birds use their plumage to attract mates. Male birds with less brilliant and showy plumage are less likely to attract a mate Male birds with showy plumage are more likely to attract a mate. Stabilizing Selection Key Low mortality, high fitness High mortality, low fitness Brightness of Selection against both extremes keep curve narrow and in same place. Male birds with showier, brightly colored plumage also attract predators, and are less likely to live long enough to find a mate. The most fit is male bird in the middle-showy, but not too showy. Feather Color Graph from BIOLOGY by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publshing©2006 EXAMPLE OF STABILIZING SELECTION Human babies born with low birth weight are less likely to survive. Babies born too large have difficulty being born. Average size babies are selected for. Graph from BIOLOGY by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publshing©2006 DISRUPTIVE SELECTION Individuals at extremes of the curve have higher fitness than individuals in middle. Can cause graph to split into two. Selection creates two DIFFERENT PHENOTYPES EXAMPLE OF DISRUPTIVE SELECTION A bird population lives in area where climate change causes medium size seeds become scarce while large and small seeds are still plentiful. Birds with bigger or smaller beaks would have greater fitness and the population may split into TWO GROUPS. One that eats small seeds and one that eats large seeds. http://www.animalbehavior.org/ABS/Stars/ONI/Podos_-_finch_graphic.jpg