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UNIT VIII POPULATION GENETICS & CLASSIFICATION • Big Campbell Ch 22-28, 31 • Baby Campbell Ch 13-17 I. INTRODUCTION TO EVOLUTION • Evolution o Change over time in the allele frequency of organisms o Descent with modification • Natural Selection o Populations of organisms can change over the generations if individuals having certain heritable traits leave more offspring than others o Differential reproductive success • Evolutionary Adaptations o A prevalence of inherited characteristics that enhance organisms’ survival and reproduction November 24, 1859 II. A HISTORY OF EVOLUTIONARY THEORY • Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1778) o Taxonomy • James Hutton (1726-1797) o Gradualism • Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck (17441829) o Use & Disuse o Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics II. A HISTORY OF EVOLUTIONARY THEORY, cont • Thomas Malthus (1776-1834) o Populations • Charles Lyell (1792-1875) o Uniformitarianism • Gregor Mendel (1822-1884) o • Alfred Wallace (1823-1913) o Independent development of evolutionary theory II. A HISTORY OF EVOLUTIONARY THEORY, cont II. A HISTORY OF EVOLUTIONARY THEORY, cont • Charles Darwin (1809-1882) II. A HISTORY OF EVOLUTIONARY THEORY, cont II. A HISTORY OF EVOLUTIONARY THEORY, cont • Darwin’s Finches o New species of finches arose from gradual accumulation of adaptations due to variations in food supply, terrain III. DARWIN’S CONCLUSIONS • Descent with Modification o Four Observations Members of a population often vary greatly in their traits. Traits are inherited from parents to offspring. All species are capable of producing more offspring that their environment can support. Owing to a lack of food or other resources, many of these offspring do not survive. III. DARWIN’S CONCLUSIONS, cont • Decent with Modification o Two Inferences Individuals whose inherited traits give them a higher probability of surviving and reproducing in a given environment tend to leave more offspring than other individuals. This unequal ability of individuals to survive and reproduce will lead to the accumulation of favorable traits in the population over generations. IV. EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION • Direct Observation o Antibiotic/Drug Resistance o Coloration in Guppies IV. EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION, cont • Fossil Record o Succession of forms over time o Transitional Links o Vertebrate descent IV. EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION, cont • Homology o Homologous structures o Vestigial organs Snakes Cetaceans Flightless birds o Convergent Evolution Independent evolution of similar features in different lineages Analogous structures IV. EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION, cont • Biogeography o Geographical distribution of species o Continental Drift Pangaea o Islands are inhabited by organisms most closely resembling nearest land mass IV. EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION, cont • Comparative Embryology o Pharyngeal Pouches Gill slits o Tail IV. EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION, cont • Molecular Biology o Similarities in DNA, proteins, genes, and gene products o Common genetic code V. POPULATION GENETICS • Population Genetics The study of genetic changes in populations • Population • Species • Gene pool Population’s genetic make-up • Modern Synthesis/Neo-Darwinism V. POPULATION GENETICS, cont • Hardy-Weinberg Principle – Predicts allele frequency in a non-evolving population; that is, a population in equilibrium – Can be used to determine if a population is evolving – States that allele frequencies in a population will remain constant from generation to generation if five conditions are met V. POPULATION GENETICS, cont • Five Conditions for Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) • If any of these conditions are not met, evolutionary change will occur V. POPULATION GENETICS, cont • Hardy-Weinberg Equation If p = frequency of one allele (A) and q = frequency of the other allele (a), then p + q = • Therefore, p = q = • • • • Frequency of AA = Frequency of aa = Frequency of Aa = Distribution of genotype frequencies in a population = V. POPULATION GENETICS, cont Hardy-Weinberg Practice Problems 1. If you know that you have 16% recessive fish (bb), . . . q2= q Therefore, p = • Calculate the frequency of each genotype using Hardy-Weinberg p 2 + 2pq + q 2 = 1 p2 = BB = 2pq = Bb = bb = V. POPULATION GENETICS, cont • Hardy-Weinberg Practice Problems, cont 2. If in a population of 1,000, 90 show recessive phenotype (aa), use Hardy-Weinberg to determine frequency of allele combinations. VI. MICROEVOLUTION • A change in the gene pool of a population over a succession of generations • Five main causes: Genetic Drift Gene Flow Natural Selection Mutation Non-random Mating VI. MICROEVOLUTION, cont • Genetic Drift o Changes in the gene pool due to chance. More often seen in small population sizes. Usually reduces genetic variability. There are two situations that can drastically reduce population size: The Bottleneck Effect: type of genetic drift resulting from a reduction in population (natural disaster) such that the surviving population is no longer genetically representative of the original population VI. MICROEVOLUTION, cont • Genetic Drift Founder Effect Genetic drift attributed to colonization by a limited number of individuals from a parent population Gene pool is different than source population VI. MICROEVOLUTION, cont • Gene Flow Genetic exchange due to the migration of fertile individuals or gametes between populations – tends to reduce differences between populations • Natural Selection Differential success in reproduction; only form of microevolution that adapts a population to its environment VI. MICROEVOLUTION, cont • Mutations A change in an organism’s DNA (gametes; many generations); original source of genetic variation (raw material for natural selection) • Nonrandom Mating Inbreeding and assortive mating - both shift frequencies of different genotypes VII. VARIATIONS IN POPULATION • Polymorphism Coexistence of 2 or more distinct forms of individuals (morphs) within the same population • Geographical Variation Differences in genetic structure between populations (cline) VII. VARIATIONS IN POPULATION, cont • Mutation and Recombination • Diploidy 2nd set of chromosomes hides variation in the heterozygote • Balanced Polymorphism Heterozygote Advantage Frequency-Dependent Selection o Survival & reproduction of any 1 morph declines if it becomes too common o Parasite/host VII. VARIATIONS IN POPULATION, cont • Adaptive Evolution due to Natural Selection Fitness - Contribution an individual makes to the gene pool of the next generation • Three ways in which natural selection alters variation Directional Diversifying Stabilizing VII. VARIATIONS IN POPULATION, cont • Sexual Selection Can result in sexual dimorphism - secondary sex characteristic distinction Intrasexual Selection Intersexual Selection VIII. MACROEVOLUTION • Origin of new taxonomic groups • Speciation Anagenesis accumulation of heritable changes transform existing species into new species Cladogenesis - budding of new species from a parent species that continues to exist (basis of biological diversity) VIII. MACROEVOLUTION, cont • Biological Species Concept Described by Ernst Mayr in 1942 A population or group of populations whose members have the potential to interbreed and produce viable, fertile offspring; in other words, similar organisms that can make babies that can make babies Can be difficult to apply to certain organisms . . . VIII. MACROEVOLUTION, cont • Reproductive Isolation o Prevent closely related species from interbreeding when their ranges overlap. o Divided into 2 types Prezygotic Postzygotic VIII. MACROEVOLUTION, cont Prezygotic Reproductive Barriers VIII. MACROEVOLUTION, cont Postzygotic Reproductive Barriers VIII. MACROEVOLUTION, cont • Speciation o Fossil record shows evidence of bursts of many new species, followed by periods of little chance Known as punctuated equilibrium o Other species appear to change more gradually Gradualism fits model of evolution proposed by Darwin VIII. MACROEVOLUTION, cont • Modes of Speciation Based on how gene flow is interrupted Allopatric Populations segregated by a geographical barrier; can result in adaptive radiation (island species) Sympatric Reproductively isolated subpopulation in the midst of its parent population (change in genome); polyploidy in plants; cichlid fishes UNIT VIII, cont - CLASSIFICATION I. EARLY EARTH • Formation of Organic Molecules o Oparin/Haldane Hypothesis Primitive Earth’s atmosphere was a reducing environment No O2 Early oceans were an organic “soup” Lightning & UV radiation provided energy for complex organic molecule formation o Miller/Urey Experiment Tested Oparin/Haldane hypothesis Simulated atmosphere composed of water, hydrogen, methane, ammonia All 20 amino acids, nitrogen bases, ATP formed Hypothesis was supported I. EARLY EARTH, cont • Three Eons First two described as Precambrian o Archaean Eon o Proterozoic Eon Present day = Phanerozoic eon o Paleozoic era o Mesozoic era o Cenozic era • Continental Drift Pangaea Gondwanaland & Laurasia • Mass Extinctions • Biogeography Study of past & present distribution of species I. EARLY EARTH, cont II. PHYLOGENY • Evolutionary history of an organism • Phylogenetics the tracing of evolutionary relationships • Linnaeus • Binomial nomenclature • Taxon (taxa) II. PHYLOGENY, cont • Relationships may be determined using morphological and molecular simlarities Homology vs. Analogy... o Homology - likenesses attributed to common ancestry o Analogy - likenesses attributed to similar ecological roles and natural selection Convergent evolution o Species from different evolutionary branches that resemble one another due to similar ecological roles II. PHYLOGENY, cont • Clade Refers to the set of species descended from a particular ancestral species Relationships illustrated with a cladogram o Branching diagram that depicts relationships among taxa o May illustrate derived character states among taxa. Derived character states are traits not found in ancestral species; indicate a close evolutionary relationship among organisms o Ingroup – Group of taxa being analyzed o Outgroup – Used as a means of comparison; closely related to, but not a part of, ingroup o Parsimony – Also known as Occam’s Razor; states that least complex explanation is most likely II. PHYLOGENY, cont II. PHYLOGENY, cont III. PROKARYOTES III. PROKARYOTES, cont Classification Methods • Domain Archaea Bacteria • Kingdom Archaebacteria Eubacteria • Shape Cocci Bacilli Spirilla • Gram Stain Reaction Positive Negative IV. PROKARYOTES - EUBACTERIA • Cell wall Peptidoglycan Gram Positive Gram Negative • Capsule Adherence Protection • Pili Adherence Conjugation IV. PROKARYOTES – EUBACTERIA, cont Motility • Flagella • Helical shape Spirochetes • Slime • Taxis IV. PROKARYOTES – EUBACTERIA, cont • Nucleoid region • Plasmids • Asexual reproduction Binary fission • “Sexual reproduction” Transformation Transduction Conjugation • Endospore Bacterial “hibernation” IV. PROKARYOTES – EUBACTERIA, cont Nutrition • Photoautotrophs Photosynthetic Harness light to drive the synthesis of organics Cyanobacteria • Chemoautotrophs Oxidation of inorganics for energy Obtain carbon from CO2 • Photoheterotrophs Use light to generate ATP Must obtain carbon in an organic form • Chemoheterotrophs Consume organic molecules for both energy and carbon Saprobes - decomposers Parasites IV. PROKARYOTES – EUBACTERIA, cont • Metabolism o Nitrogen fixation Conversion of atmospheric nitrogen (N2) to ammonium (NH4+) o Metabolic Cooperation Biofilms o Oxygen relationships Obligate aerobes Facultative anaerobes Obligate anaerobes IV. PROKARYOTES – EUBACTERIA, cont Prokaryotic Ecology • Decomposers • Nitrogen Fixation • Symbiosis Commensalism Mutualism Parasitism IV. PROKARYOTES – EUBACTERIA, cont Bacterial Pathogenesis • Koch’s Postulates – Criteria for bacterial disease confirmation • Opportunistic Normal residents of host; cause illness when defenses are weakened • Exotoxins Bacterial proteins that can produce disease w/o the prokaryote present (botulism) • Endotoxins Components of gram negative membranes (Salmonella) V. ORIGINS OF EUKARYOTIC CELLS • Endosymbiotic Theory (AKA “Endosymbiont Theory”) • Margulis • Mitochondria and chloroplasts were formerly from small prokaryotes living within larger cells V. ORIGINS OF EUKARYOTIC CELLS Support for Endosymbiotic Theory • DNA structure • Double membrane • Replication of Mitochondria/Chloroplasts • Ribosomes • Similarities between chloroplast/mitochondrial DNA & specific bacterial genomes, including cyanobacteria • Enzymes EUKARYOTES VI. KINGDOM PROTISTA • • • • Very diverse All __________________ Mostly _________________ Classified according to eukaryotic kingdom protist is most like, nutrition Animal-like Ingestive Protozoa Plant-like Photosynthetic Algae Fungus-like Absorptive Slime Molds VI. KINGDOM PROTISTA, cont Protist Phylogeny VI. KINGDOM PROTISTA, cont Protist Systematics • Diplomonads Lack mitochondria, cell walls Giardia lamblia Trichomonas vaginalis • Euglenoids Most are heterotrophic; may be autotrophic Pellicle Flagellated Many have “eyespot” Euglena Trypanosoma VI. KINGDOM PROTISTA - Systematics, cont • Alveolates Contain small sacs called alveoli; may help regulate water, ion concentration Dinoflagellates – phytoplankton, also known as “spinning algae” Red Tides Ciliates – Paramecium, Stentor Apicomplexa - all parasitic; lack cilia, flagella Plasmodium Toxoplasma VI. KINGDOM PROTISTA - Systematics, cont • Stramenopila • Water molds (decomposers), mildews (parasitic), algae (photosynthetic) Diatoms Photosynthetic; make up most of Earth’s plankton Have glass-like silicon shells Brown Algae Golden Algae VI. KINGDOM PROTISTA - Systematics, cont • Foraminiferans Ca Carbonate shells Dead foraminiferans settle on ocean floor; shells become chalk White Cliffs of Dover • Rhodopyhta Red algae Mostly multicellular • Chlorophyta Green Algae Volvox Spirogyra Chlamydomonas Unicellular; may be colonial Chloroplasts, cell walls of cellulose Gave rise to land plants VI. KINGDOM PROTISTA - Systematics, cont • Amoebozoa All have pseudopods Amoeba May be parasitic Entamoeba histolytica Slime Molds VII. KINGDOM FUNGI VII. KINGDOM FUNGI, cont Characteristics of Fungi • Heterotrophic by absorption; releases exoenzymes Decomposers (saprobes) Parasites Mutualistic symbionts (lichens) • Hyphae - body filaments Septate (cross walls) Coenocytic (no cross walls) • Mycelium - network of hyphae • Chitin cell walls VII. KINGDOM FUNGI, cont Life Cycle QuickTime™ and a Cinepak decompressor are needed to see this picture. VII. KINGDOM FUNGI, cont Classification • Phylum Chytridiomycota Most closely related to protists; considered to be most primitive member of Kingdom Fungi Aquatic fungi • Phylum Zygomycota Food mold; Rhizopus Mycorrhizae Produce spores from zygote surrounded by thick covering called zygosporangium; may remain dormant for months; resistant to extreme conditons VII. KINGDOM FUNGI - Classification, cont • Phylum Ascomycota Sac fungi Yeasts, truffles, morels, Sordaria Produce sexual and asexual spores Ascus – sexual spore Conidia – asexual spore • Phylum Basidiomycota Club fungi Mushrooms, puffballs, bracket fungi Basidiocarp – haploid hyphae fuse, meiosis occurs, formation of basidospores VII. KINGDOM FUNGI, cont Specialized Life Styles • Molds Used to be classified as Deuteromycota or “Imperfect Fungi” No known sexual stage Penicillium • Yeasts Unicellular Reproduce asexually; budding Saccharomyces • Lichens Mutualistic relationship with algae, cyanobacterium Sensitive to air pollution • Mycorrhizae Mutualistic relationship found in 95% of all plants Increases absorptive surface of roots