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The Evolution of Populations Ch 11 Genetic Variation within Populations Genetic variations in a population increases the chance some individuals will survive Gene pool- the combined alleles of all of the individuals in a population. Allele Frequency- measure of how common a certain allele is in the population Gg gg How many G alleles are there? How many g alleles are there? GG GG gg GG Gg gg GG GG gg GG How many G alleles are there? =7 Allele frequency How many g alleles are there? G = 5/12 x 100 = 41.7% =5 G = 7/12 x 100 = 58.3% What causes genetic variation? Mutations- random change in DNA can form new alleles Recombination- when sex cells are made, parents’ alleles are arranged in new ways (crossing over) Natural Selection at Work Distribution where the frequency is highest near the mean value = normal distribution (bell shaped curve) Phenotypes in the middle are the most common and extremes are less common Directional Selection Type of selection that favors phenotypes at one extreme of a trait’s range Ex: Rise of drug resistant bacteria Before the 40’s, drug resistance in bacteria existed but didn’t give bacteria an advantage. One antibiotics developed, resistant bacteria had an advantage and reproduced in high numbers Stabilizing Selection Phenotype in the middle becomes more common Disruptive Selection When both extreme phenotypes are favored and those in the middle are selected against Male Lazuli Buntings: Bright blue and bluish brown males are seen as threat Dull birds are left alone and win mates and the brightest blue attract mates regardless because of their color. Those in the middle are too blue to be left alone and too dull to win a mate on color alone Gene Flow Movement of alleles from one populating to another Genetic Drift Changes in an allele frequency due to chance (causes a loss in genetic diversity) Genetic Drift Bottleneck effect Occurs after an event that greatly reduces the size of a population Founder effect Occurs after a small number of individual s colonize a new area. These gene pools are often different from those of the larger population Sexual Selection Certain traits increase mating success Competition among males to win a mate Males display certain traits that attract females http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VjE0Kdfos4Y http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L54bxmZy_NE Hardy - Weinberg Equilibrium G. Hardy and W. Weinberg 1908 showed that genotype frequencies in a population stay the same over time as log as certain conditions are met. These frequencies can be predicted. Conditions for Equilibrium (otherwise evolution occurs!) 1. A very large population (no genetic drift) 2. No emigration or immigration (no gene flow) 3. No mutations 4. Random mating (no sexual selection) 5. No natural selection (all traits equally aid survival) Hardy-Weinberg Equation p2+ 2pq + q2 = 1 p+q=1 p = frequency of dominant allele q = frequency of recessive allele p2 = frequency of homozygous dominant genotype (Ex: TT) q2 = frequency of homozygous recessive genotype (Ex : tt) 2 pq = frequency of heterozygous genotype ( (Ex: Tt) Example: Calculate predicted genotype frequencies In a population of 1000 fish, 640 have forked tails and 360 have smooth tails. Tail fin shape is determined by 2 alleles: T = forked t = smooth Frequency of homozygous recessive (tt) q2 = 360/1000 = .36 √. 36 = q = 0.60 p + q = 1 , therefore p = .40 Calculate the predicted genotype frequencies from the allele frequencies: p2 = (.4)2 = 0.16 or 16% TT 2pq = 2 x (.4)(.6) = 0.48 or 48% Tt q2 = (.6)2 = 0.36 or 36% tt Speciation through isolation Reproductive isolation- members of different populations can no longer mate successfully Offspring don’t survive or are infertile Speciation- rise of 2 or more species from an existing species Geographic isolation- physical barriers divide population Types of Evolution Convergent = different species adapt to similar environments Analogous structures Divergent = closely related species evolve in different directions Co-evolution = process by which 2 or more species evolve in response to changes in each other. Speciation Patterns Punctuated Equilibrium = Speciation occurs suddenly in geologic time and followed by long periods of little evolution Adaptive radiation = diversification of one ancestral species into many descendants