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Chapter 17 Processes of Evolution Sections 1-6 Albia Dugger • Miami Dade College 17.1 Rise of the Super Rats • When warfarin was used to control rats, natural selection favored individuals with a mutation in the VKORC1 gene which resulted in warfarin resistance • When warfarin resistance increased in rat populations, people stopped using warfarin to kill rats • The frequency of the warfarin-resistance allele in rat populations declined, probably because rats that carry the allele are not as healthy as ones that do not Rats Infesting Rice Fields in the Philippines Natural Selection for Resistant Rats 17.2 Individuals Don’t Evolve, Populations Do • Mutations in individuals are the source of new alleles in a population’s gene pool • A change in an allele’s frequency in a population is called microevolution Variation In Populations • All individuals of a species share certain morphological, physiological, and behavioral traits • A population is a group of interbreeding individuals of the same species in a specified area • Individuals of a population with different alleles of shared genes vary in the details of their shared traits Morphs • Many traits have two or more distinct forms (morphs) • A trait with only two forms is dimorphic • Traits with more than two distinct forms are polymorphic • Traits that vary continuously among individuals of a population may be influenced by alleles of several genes Phenotypic Variations An Evolutionary View of Mutations • Mutations are the source of new alleles that give rise to differences in details of shared traits • Lethal mutations result in death • Neutral mutations have no effect on survival or reproduction • Beneficial mutations convey an advantage Table 17-1 p272 The Gene Pool • Gene pool • All genes found in one population • Alleles • Different forms of the same gene • Determine genotype and phenotype • Dimorphism and polymorphism Allele Frequencies and Microevolution • Allele frequency refers to the relative abundance of a particular allele of a given gene in a population • Changes in allele frequency of a population (or a species) is called microevolution • Microevolutionary processes include mutation, natural selection, genetic drift, and gene flow Take-Home Message: What mechanisms drive evolution? • Individuals of a natural population share morphological, physiological, and behavioral traits characteristic of the species • Different alleles are the basis of differences in the details of a population’s shared traits • All alleles of all individuals in a population make up the population’s gene pool • Changes in allele frequency (microevolution) are always occurring in natural populations 17.3 Genetic Equilibrium • Natural populations are always evolving • Researchers trace evolution within a population by tracking deviations from a baseline of genetic equilibrium – a theoretical state in which a population is not evolving • Natural populations are never in genetic equilibrium Genetic Equilibrium • Under certain ideal conditions, the frequency of an allele in a sexually reproducing population’s gene pool should remain stable from one generation to the next • Five conditions required for a genetic equilibrium: • Mutations do not occur • Population is infinitely large • Population is isolated (no gene flow) • Mating is random • All individuals survive and reproduce equally The Hardy-Weinberg Formula • The Hardy-Weinberg formula can be used to determine if a population is in genetic equilibrium p2(BB) + 2pq (Bb) + q2(bb) = 1.0 • The frequency of the dominant allele (B) plus the recessive allele (b) equals 1.0 p + q = 1.0 A Two Allele System one type of gametes two types of gametes one type of gametes Predicted Proportions in a Population Applying the Rule • A population consists of 1,000 plants: 490 homozygous (BB), 420 heterozygous (Bb), and 90 homozygous (bb) • Each plant makes two gametes: • All gametes made by BB individuals have the B allele • All gametes made by bb individuals have the b allele • Bb individuals have half B gametes half b gametes Applying the Rule • Frequency of the B allele: p (B) = (980 + 420) ÷ 2,000 = 1,400 ÷ 2,000 = 0.7 • Frequency of the b allele: q (b) = (180 + 420) ÷ 2,000 = 600 ÷ 2,000 = 0.3 Applying the Rule • Predicted proportion of individuals in the next generation: BB (p2) = (0.7)2 = 0.49 Bb (2pq) = 2 (0.7 × 0.3) = 0.42 bb (q2) = (0.3)2 = 0.09 Real World Situations • Researchers used genetic equilibrium to determine the carrier frequency of an allele that causes hereditary hemochromatosis (HH) • The allele’s frequency (q) was found to be 0.14 • Frequency of the normal allele (p) = 1.0 – 0.14 = 0.86 • Carrier frequency (2pq) is calculated at 0.24 Take-Home Message: How do we know when a population is evolving? • Researchers measure genetic change by comparing it with a theoretical baseline of genetic equilibrium • Allele frequencies are always changing in natural populations because ideal conditions can never be met ANIMATED FIGURE: How to find out if a population is evolving To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE 17.4 Patterns of Natural Selection • Natural selection occurs in different patterns depending on the organisms involved and their environment Natural Selection • Natural selection results from the differential survival and reproduction among individuals of a population that vary in details of their shared traits • Natural selection occurs in three recognizable patterns depending on the organisms and their environment: • Directional selection • Stabilizing selection • Disruptive selection Three Modes of Natural Selection population before selection directional selection stabilizing selection disruptive selection Take-Home Message: Does evolution occur in recognizable patterns? • Natural selection, the most influential process of evolution, occurs in patterns that depend on the organisms and their environment 17.5 Directional Selection • Changing environmental conditions can result in a directional shift in allele frequencies • Directional selection • Changing environmental conditions can shift allele frequencies in a consistent direction • Forms of traits at one end of a range of phenotypic variation become more common Number of individuals in population Time 1 Range of values for the trait Time 2 Time 3 Stepped Art Figure 17-5 p276 ANIMATED FIGURE: Directional selection To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE Directional Selection in Peppered Moths • In preindustrial England, most moths were light-colored, and a dominant allele that resulted in darker coloration was rare • In post-industrial England, pollution from coal-burning factories changed the colors of the forests • Predatory birds ate more light-colored moths in soot-darkened forests, and more dark-colored moths in clean forests • Light color is adaptive in areas of low pollution; dark color is adaptive in areas of high pollution Directional Selection in Peppered Moths ANIMATED FIGURE: Change in moth population To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE Directional Selection in Rock-Pocket Mice • In rock-pocket mice, two alleles of a single gene control coat color • Night-flying owls are the selective pressure that directionally shifts the allele frequency • Most of the mice in populations that inhabit dark rock have dark gray coats • Most of the mice in populations that inhabit light brown rock have light brown coats Directional Selection in Rock-Pocket Mice Directional Selection in Rock-Pocket Mice Directional Selection in Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria • A typical two-week course of antibiotics can exert selection pressure on over a thousand generations of bacteria • Antibiotics are used preventively in humans, cattle, pigs, chickens, fish, and other animals raised on factory farms • Bacteria with alleles that allow them to survive antibiotic treatment (antibiotic resistant strains) are now common in hospitals and schools Take-Home Message: What is the effect of directional selection? • Directional selection causes allele frequencies underlying a range of variation to shift in a consistent direction 17.6 Stabilizing and Disruptive Selection • Stabilizing selection • Natural selection that favors an intermediate phenotype and eliminates extreme forms • Disruptive selection • Natural selection that favors extreme forms of a trait and eliminates the intermediate forms Number of individuals in population Time 1 Range of values for the trait Time 2 Time 3 Stepped Art Figure 17-8 p278 ANIMATED FIGURE: Stabilizing selection To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE Stabilizing Selection: Sociable Weavers • Body weight in sociable weavers is a trade-off between risks of starvation and predation • Food supplies are limited – leaner birds do not store enough fat to avoid starvation • Fatter birds may be more attractive to predators, and not as agile when escaping • Birds of intermediate weight have the selective advantage Sociable Weavers Body Weight of Sociable Weavers Number of individuals in population Time 1 Range of values for the trait Time 2 Time 3 Stepped Art Figure 17-10 p279 ANIMATED FIGURE: Disruptive selection To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE Disruptive Selection in African Finches • The bill of a blackbellied seedcracker is either 12 millimeters wide, or wider than 15 millimeters • These finches feed on seeds of two types of sedge – one with hard seeds, one with soft seeds • Small-billed birds are better at opening soft seeds; large-billed birds are better at opening hard seeds Bill Size in African Finches ANIMATED FIGURE: Disruptive selection among African finches To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE Take-Home Message: Natural selection can favor intermediate or extreme forms of traits • With stabilizing selection, an intermediate phenotype is favored, and extreme forms are selected against • With disruptive selection, an intermediate form of a trait is selected against, and extreme phenotypes are favored