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Population Genetics Populations: Group of individuals of the same species living in the same area. Species: Group of populations the interbreed and provide offspring. Gene Pool : Aggregate of genes in a population. – In diploid species each individual represents a double dose of genes. Allele Frequency: How often an allele appears in a population. – Lets examine a population of 500 wild flowers. – RR, Rr – red rr - white – 480 flowers are red 320 RR 160 Rr 320 x 2 = 640 160 x 1 = 160 800 R – 20 flowers are white 20 rr 160 Rr – 20 x 2 = 40 160 x 1 = 160 200 r 800/1000 = 0.8 R occurs 80% r occurs 20% 200/1000 = 0.2 Hardy Weinberg Theorem Creates a theoretical non-evolving model population to compare other evolving populations to. A population in Hardy Weinberg equilibrium is a stable population in which the allele frequencies do not change. Shuffling of alleles by Meiosis and random fertilization have no effect on the overall gene pool. So the chance thath the offspring will receive an R is 0.8 or 80% and the chance the offspring will receive an r is 0.2 or 20%. So what are the chances that an R will end up with another R? – Rule of multiplication: – 0.8 x 0.8 = .64 64% should be RR – 0.2 x 0.2 = 0.04 4% should be rr – That means 32% should be Rr Rule of Addition Applies to Heterozygotes There are two ways in which a heterozygote can occur. Maternal R r Paternal r R – Rr + Rr = 2Rr – 2(0.8 x 0.2) = 0.32 or 32 % The dominant allele can be represented by P and the recessive allele by p. P + q = 1 P2 P2 =RR and q2 = rr so 2pq = Rr + 2pq + q2 = 1 These equations can be used to predict allele frequencies in a given population. To Maintain Hardy Weinberg Equilibrium we must Assume: – – – – – The population is very large There is no migration There are no net mutations Random mating occurs There is no natural selection occurring. Microevolution – small changes in populations from generation to generation. – Two primary causes of microevolution are genetic drift and natural selection. Two Main causes for Microevolution Genetic Drift: Change in allele frequencies due to chance. Natural Selection: Differential reproductive success. Two main mechanisms that cause genetic drift. – Bottleneck effect: Most individuals of the population die off leaving behind an overrepresentation of some alleles. – Founder Effect: a few individuals leave the population to create a new population. – Both reduce the population number so that genetic drift is significant. Other Mechanisms that change allele frequencies: – Natural Selection Works on genetic genetic variation within the population. Gene Flow - migration – Mutation – change the DNA itself. Only germ line mutations are significant. Polymorphisms Not all phenotypic variations in a population are heritable. Environmental factors can affect phenotype. Polymorphisms are two or more distinct phenotypes within a species often called morphs. Morphs Are Created by Several Factors Nucleotide sequence variation. – RFLP’s Environmental – Cline – gradual phenotypic change due to climate change. Variations are created by: – Mutation – Sexual recombination Balanced Polymorphism Natural Selection maintains several morphs within a population. – Heterozygote advantage – Sickle Cell Anemia Frequency Dependent Selection – One morph becomes too common and it is selected against. Neutral Variation No effect on selection. Nucleotide sequence different(fingerprinting) “Dawinian Fitness” Contribution of genes relative to next generation. Relative Fitness - contribution of alleles to the next generation compared to the other individuals in the population. – A relative fitness of 1 is assigned to the individual that contributes the most alleles. – Red flowers produce the most offspring that survive. – White flowers produce 80% of the offspring that the red flowers do. – White flower allele has a fitness of 0.8 Relative fitness of a sterile organism is 0 Factors That Affect Allele Frequencies Directional Selection – One extreme morph is favored. Diversifying Selection – Both extreme phenotypes are favored. Stabilizing Selection – The most predominant phenotype is favored. Reduces variation Sexual Dimorphism – Sexes look different Assorative mating – Animals actively select phenotypes Intrasexual Selection – Same sex competes for the opposite sex. Intersexual Selection – Choosey female chooses best male. Four Main Reasons Natural Selection Does not Create Perfect Individuals Ancestors not sraped, nature works on preeisting species. Adaptations are a compromise – Sea flippers land and sea. Not all evolution is adaptive. – Best insects may not get blown by the storm. Selection can only edit what already exists. – Humans have back problems due to bipedalism.