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Chapter 23 The Evolution of Populations Populations, Genes, and Evolution Are Related  Evolutionary changes occur from generation to generation, causing descendants to differ from their ancestors  Evolution is a property populations, not individuals  A population is a group that includes all members of a species living in a given area  Genes and the environment interact to determine traits Microevolution  A change in allele frequencies in a population over generations  3 mechanisms cause allele frequency change:  Natural selection  Genetic drift  Gene flow  Only natural selection causes adaptive evolution Genetic variation makes evolution possible  Variation in heritable traits is a prerequisite for evolution  Mendel’s work on pea plants provided evidence of discrete heritable units (genes)  Natural selection can only act on variation with a genetic component Genes and the environment interact to determine traits  In diploid individuals, each gene consists of two alleles  Homozygous - alleles are the same  Heterozygous - alleles are different  The specific alleles on an organism’s chromosomes (its genotype) interact with the environment to influence the development of its physical and behavioral traits (its phenotype) Hamster example  Coat color is determined by two alleles in hamsters  The dominant allele encodes for an enzyme that catalyzes black pigment  The recessive allele encodes for an enzyme that catalyzes brown pigment  Hamsters with at least one dominant allele produce black pigment (homozygous dominant or heterozygous)  Hamsters with two recessive alleles produce brown pigment (homozygous recessive) Alleles, Genotype, and Phenotype Coat-color allele B is dominant, so heterozygous hamsters have black coats Each chromosome has one allele of the coat-color gene phenotype genotype BB B Bb B B bb b b b chromosomes homozygous heterozygous homozygous Gene Pool  The gene pool is the sum of the genes in a population  Population genetics deals with the frequency, distribution, and inheritance of alleles in populations  A gene pool consists of all the alleles of all the genes in all individuals of a population  For a given gene, the proportion of times a certain allele occurs in a population relative to the occurrence of all the alleles for that gene is called its allele frequency More Hamster Examples  Illustrate the idea of allele frequency  A population of 25 hamsters contains 50 alleles of the coat color gene (diploid)  If 20 of those 50 alleles code for black coats, then the frequency of the black allele is 0.40, or 40% (20/50 = 0.40) A Gene Pool Population: 25 individuals Gene pool: 50 alleles BBBBBBBB BB BB BB BB BBBB b b b b Bb Bb Bb Bb BBBB b b b b Bb Bb Bb Bb BBBB b b b b Bb Bb Bb Bb bbbbbbbb bb bb bb bb bbbbbbbb bb bb bb bb bb bb The gene pool for the coat-color gene contains 20 copies of allele B and 30 copies for allele b Gene Variation  Can be measured as gene variability or nucleotide variability  Gene variability - average heterozygosity measures the average percent of loci that are heterozygous in a population  Nucleotide variability - measured by comparing the DNA sequences of pairs of individuals Variation Within a Population  Both discrete and quantitative characters contribute to variation within a population  Discrete characters can be classified on an either-or basis  Either red, or white  Quantitative characters vary along a continuum within a population  Skin color, height Variation Between Populations  Most species exhibit geographic variation, differences between gene pools of separate populations  Chromosomal variation among populations is due to drift, not natural selection (more later)  The island of Madeira is home to several isolated populations of mice  Some examples of geographic variation occur as a cline, which is a graded change in a trait along a geographic axis  Mummichog fish vary in a cold-adaptive allele along a temperature gradient, due to natural selection Figure 23.4 1 2.4 3.14 5.18 6 7.15 8.11 9.12 10.16 13.17 19 XX 1 2.19 3.8 4.16 9.10 11.12 13.17 15.18 5.14 6.7 XX Figure 23.5 Ldh-Bb allele frequency 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 46 44 42 Maine Cold (6°C) 40 38 36 Latitude (ºN) 34 32 Georgia Warm (21ºC) 30 Formation of New Alleles  A mutation is a change in nucleotide sequence of DNA  Only mutations in gametes can be passed onto offspring  A point mutation is a change in one base in a gene The effects of point mutations can vary:  Mutations in noncoding regions of DNA are harmless  Mutations in a genes can be neutral due to redundancy in the genetic code  Mutations that result in a change in protein production are often harmful  Mutations that result in a change in protein production can sometimes be beneficial Sources of Genetic Variation  New genes and alleles can arise by mutation or gene duplication Altering Gene Number or Position  Chromosomal mutations that delete, disrupt, or rearrange many loci are typically harmful  Duplication of small pieces of DNA increases genome size and is usually less harmful  Duplicated genes can take on new functions by further mutation  An ancestral odor-detecting gene has been duplicated many times: humans have 1,000 copies of the gene, mice have 1,300 Rapid Reproduction  Mutation rates are low in animals and plants  The average is about one mutation in every 100,000 genes per generation  Mutations rates are often lower in prokaryotes and higher in viruses Sexual Reproduction  Sexual reproduction can shuffle existing alleles into new combinations  In organisms that reproduce sexually, recombination of alleles is more important than mutation in producing the genetic differences that make adaptation possible Evolution  Evolution is the change of allele frequencies within a population  A casual observer might define evolution on the basis of changes in the outward appearance or behaviors of the members of a population  A population geneticist, however, defines evolution as the changes in allele frequencies that occur in a gene pool over time  If allele frequencies change from one generation to the next, the population is evolving  If allele frequencies do not change from generation to generation, the population is not evolving Hardy-Weinberg Principle  The equilibrium population is a hypothetical population in which evolution does not occur, an idealized population in which allele frequencies do not change from generation to generation  The Hardy-Weinberg principle, mathematical model, 1908  English mathematician Godfrey H. Hardy  German physician, Wilhelm Weinberg  The Hardy-Weinberg principle demonstrates that, under certain conditions, the frequencies of alleles and genotypes in a sexually reproducing population remain constant from one generation to the next Frequency of each allele can be measured  If there are 2 alleles at a locus, p and q are used to represent their frequencies  The frequency of all alleles in a population will add up to 1  For example, p + q = 1  Consider a population of wildflowers that is incompletely dominant for color:  320 red flowers (CRCR)  160 pink flowers (CRCW)  20 white flowers (CWCW)  Calculate the number of copies of each allele:  CR  (320  2)  160  800  CW  (20  2)  160  200  To calculate the frequency of each allele:  p  freq CR  800 / (800  200)  0.8  q  freq CW  200 / (800  200)  0.2  The sum of alleles is always 1  0.8  0.2  1 The Hardy-Weinberg Principle  The Hardy-Weinberg principle describes a population that is not evolving  If a population does not meet the criteria of the Hardy- Weinberg principle, it can be concluded that the population is evolving Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium  The Hardy-Weinberg principle states that frequencies of alleles and genotypes in a population remain constant from generation to generation  In a given population where gametes contribute to the next generation randomly, allele frequencies will not change  Mendelian inheritance preserves genetic variation in a population Figure 23.7 Alleles in the population Frequencies of alleles p = frequency of CR allele = 0.8 q = frequency of CW allele = 0.2 Gametes produced Each egg: 80% chance 20% chance Each sperm: 80% chance 20% chance  Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium describes the constant frequency of alleles in such a gene pool  Consider, for example, the same population of 500 wildflowers and 1000 alleles where  p  freq CR  0.8  q  freq CW  0.2  The frequency of genotypes can be calculated  CRCR  p2  (0.8)2  0.64  CRCW  2pq  2(0.8)(0.2)  0.32  CWCW  q2  (0.2)2  0.04  The frequency of genotypes can be confirmed using a Punnett square © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 23.8 80% CR (p = 0.8) 20% CW (q = 0.2) CR (80%) Sperm CW (20%) CR (80%) 64% (p2) CRCR Eggs CW 16% (pq) CRC W 16% (qp) CRCW (20%) 4% (q2) CW CW 64% CRCR, 32% CRCW, and 4% CWCW Gametes of this generation: 64% CR (from CRCR plants) R + 16% C R W (from C C plants) = 80% CR = 0.8 = p 4% CW (from CWCW plants) W + 16% C R W (from C C plants) = 20% CW = 0.2 = q Genotypes in the next generation: 64% CRCR, 32% CRCW, and 4% CWCW plants  If p and q represent the relative frequencies of the only two possible alleles in a population at a particular locus, then  p2  2pq  q2  1  where p2 and q2 represent the frequencies of the homozygous genotypes and 2pq represents the frequency of the heterozygous genotype Conditions for Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium  The Hardy-Weinberg theorem describes a hypothetical population that is not evolving  In real populations, allele and genotype frequencies do change over time 5 conditions for non-evolving populations are rarely met in nature: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. No mutations Random mating No natural selection Extremely large population size No gene flow Natural populations can evolve at some loci & be in equilibrium at other loci Applying Hardy-Weinberg Principle  We can assume locus that causes phenylketonuria (PKU) is in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium given that: 1. PKU gene mutation rate is low 2. Mate selection is random with respect to whether or not an individual is a carrier for the PKU allele 3. Natural selection can only act on rare homozygous individuals who do not follow dietary restrictions 4. Population is large 5. Migration has no effect as other populations have similar allele frequencies  The Biology Place Lab bench activity What Causes Evolution?  From the conditions that disturb a Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, we predict five causes of evolutionary change  Mutation  Gene flow  Small population size  Non-random mating  Natural selection Mutation  The original source of genetic variability  Mutations arise spontaneously, not as a result of or in anticipation of, environmental necessity  Can be beneficial, harmful, or neutral  Little or no immediate effect  Can be passed to offspring only if they occur in cells that give rise to gametes  Source of new alleles Mutations Occur Spontaneously 1 Start with bacterial colonies that have never been exposed to antibiotics 2 Use velvet to transfer colonies to identical positions in three dishes containing the antibiotic streptomycin 3 Incubate the dishes 4 Only streptomycinresistant colonies grow; the few colonies are in the exact same positions in each dish Gene Flow  Gene flow - movement of alleles from one population to another  Gene flow between populations changes allele frequencies  Movement of individuals between populations commonly causes gene flow  Alleles can move between populations even if organisms do not  Pollen (sperm) and seeds from flowering plants move and distribute alleles Pollen Can Be an Agent of Gene Flow Great tit (Parus major) on the island of Vlieland  The Mating causes gene flow between the central and eastern populations of the island  Immigration from the mainland introduces alleles that decrease fitness  Natural selection selects for alleles that increase fitness  Birds in the central region with high immigration have a lower fitness  Birds in the east with low immigration have a higher fitness Figure 23.12 60 Survival rate (%) 50 Population in which the surviving females eventually bred Central population Central Eastern NORTH SEA Eastern population Vlieland, the Netherlands 40 2 km 30 20 10 0 Females born in central population Females born in eastern population Parus major Evolutionary effect of gene flow  To increase the genetic similarity of different populations of a species  Mixing alleles prevents the development of large differences in genetic compositions of populations  If gene flow between populations of a species is blocked, the resulting genetic differences may grow so large that one of the populations becomes a new species Genetic Drift  Genetic drift describes how allele frequencies fluctuate unpredictably from one generation to the next  The smaller a sample, the greater the chance of deviation from a predicted result  Genetic drift tends to reduce genetic variation through loss of alleles  In small populations, drift can result in the complete loss of an allele in a few generations Figure 23.9-1 CRCR CRCR CRCW CWCW CRCR CRCW CRCR CRCR CRCW CRCW Generation 1 p (frequency of CR) = 0.7 q (frequency of CW) = 0.3 Figure 23.9-2 CRCR CRCR CRCW CWCW CRCR 5 plants leave offspring CWCW CRCW CRCR CWCW CRCR CRCW CRCW CRCR CRCR CRCW CRCW Generation 1 p (frequency of CR) = 0.7 q (frequency of CW) = 0.3 CWCW CRCW CRCR CRCW Generation 2 p = 0.5 q = 0.5 Figure 23.9-3 CRCR CRCR CRCW CWCW CRCR 5 plants leave offspring CWCW CRCW CRCR CWCW CRCR CRCW CRCW CRCR CRCR CRCW CRCW Generation 1 p (frequency of CR) = 0.7 q (frequency of CW) = 0.3 CWCW CRCW 2 plants leave offspring CRCR CRCR CRCR CRCR CRCR CRCR CRCR CRCR CRCW Generation 2 p = 0.5 q = 0.5 CRCR CRCR CRCR Generation 3 p = 1.0 q = 0.0 Two Causes of Genetic Drift 1. Population bottleneck  A drastic reduction in population size brought about by natural catastrophe or overhunting  Can rapidly change allele frequencies and reduce genetic variation  A bottleneck has been documented in the northern elephant seal  Hunted almost to extinction in the 1800s, the elephant seals were reduced to 20 individuals by 1890s  A hunting ban allowed the population to increase to 30,000  Biochemical analysis shows that present-day northern elephant seals are almost genetically identical  Despite their numbers, their lack of genetic variation leaves them little flexibility to evolve if their environmental circumstances change Population Bottlenecks Reduce Variation 2. Founder Effect  The founder effect - occurs when a small number of individuals leave a large population and establish a new isolated population  By chance, the allele frequencies of founders may differ from those of the original population  Over time, the new population may exhibit allele frequencies that differ from the original population A Human Example of the Founder Effect in Amish populations Case Study: Impact of Genetic Drift on the Greater Prairie Chicken  Loss of prairie habitat caused a severe reduction in the population of greater prairie chickens in Illinois  The surviving birds had low levels of genetic variation, and only 50% of their eggs hatched Figure 23.11 Post-bottleneck (Illinois, 1993) Pre-bottleneck (Illinois, 1820) Greater prairie chicken Range of greater prairie chicken (a) Location Illinois 1930–1960s 1993 Percentage of eggs hatched Population size Number of alleles per locus 1,000–25,000 <50 5.2 3.7 93 <50 Kansas, 1998 (no bottleneck) 750,000 5.8 99 Nebraska, 1998 (no bottleneck) 75,000– 200,000 5.8 96 (b)  Researchers compared DNA from museum specimens to compare genetic variation in the population before and after the bottleneck  The results showed a loss of alleles at several loci  Researchers introduced greater prairie chickens from populations in other states and were successful in introducing new alleles, increasing the egg hatch rate to 90% Mating within a Population  Organisms within a population rarely mate randomly  Nonrandom mating will not change the overall frequency of alleles in a population  Nonrandom mating will change the distribution of genotypes and of phenotypes in a population  Many organisms have limited mobility and remain near their place of birth, hatching, or germination, increasing the likelihood of inbreeding  In animals, nonrandom mating can arise if individuals have preferences that influence their choice of mates  Nonrandom mating may lead to inbreeding  Increased chance of producing homozygous offspring Nonrandom Mating Among Snow Geese  Life on an Island Natural Selection  All genotypes are not equally beneficial  Natural selection favors certain alleles at the expense of others  Those individuals with the selective advantage have higher reproductive success, so their alleles are passed on to the next generation  The evolution of penicillin-resistant bacteria illustrates the relationship between natural selection and evolution Natural Selection Is The Only Mechanism That Consistently Causes Adaptive Evolution  Evolution by natural selection involves both change and “sorting”  New genetic variations arise by chance  Beneficial alleles are “sorted” and favored by natural selection  Only natural selection consistently results in adaptive evolution  Natural selection brings about adaptive evolution by acting on an organism’s phenotype  What do we mean by “adaptive evolution? Relative Fitness  “struggle for existence” and “survival of the fittest” are misleading as they imply direct competition among individuals  Reproductive success is generally more subtle and depends on many factors  Relative fitness is the contribution an individual makes to the gene pool of the next generation, relative to the contributions of other individuals  Selection favors certain genotypes by acting on the phenotypes of certain organisms Three modes of selection:  Directional selection favors individuals at one end of the phenotypic range  Disruptive selection favors individuals at both extremes of the phenotypic range  Stabilizing selection favors intermediate variants and acts against extreme phenotypes Frequency of individuals Figure 23.13 Original population Evolved population (a) Directional selection Original population Phenotypes (fur color) (b) Disruptive selection (c) Stabilizing selection The Key Role of Natural Selection in Adaptive Evolution  Adaptations have arisen by natural selection  Cuttlefish can change color rapidly for camouflage  Jaws of snakes  Cuttlefish changing colors All Genotypes are not Equally Beneficial  Evolutionary changes are not “good” or “progressive” in any absolute sense  Penicillin-resistant bacteria were favored only because of the presence of penicillin  What happens in an environment free of penicillin?  Evolution is a compromise between opposing pressures  The long neck of male giraffes was favored only because it confers a distinct advantage in combat to establish dominance  The long neck of a giraffe is a compromise between the advantage of being able to win contests with other males and a disadvantage of vulnerability while drinking water A Compromise Between Opposing Environmental Pressures How Does Natural Selection Work?  Natural selection stems from unequal reproduction  Natural selection is often associated with the phrase “survival of the fittest”  The fittest individuals are those that not only survive, but are able to leave the most offspring behind  It is reproductive success that determines the future of an individual’s alleles  Because the environment can change, adaptive evolution is a continuous process Sexual Selection  Sexual selection is natural selection for mating success  It can result in sexual dimorphism, marked differences between the sexes in secondary sexual characteristics Sexual Selection  Intrasexual selection is competition among individuals of one sex for mates (usually males) of the opposite sex  Intersexual selection, mate choice, occurs when individuals of one sex (usually females) are choosy in selecting mates  Male showiness due to mate choice can increase a male’s chances of attracting a female, while decreasing his chances of survival  How do female preferences evolve?  The good genes hypothesis suggests that if a trait is related to male health, both the male trait and female preference for that trait should increase in frequency Figure 23.16 EXPERIMENT Recording of LC male’s call Recording of SC male’s call Female gray tree frog LC male gray tree frog SC male gray tree frog SC sperm  Eggs  LC sperm Offspring of SC father Offspring of LC father Survival and growth of these half-sibling offspring compared RESULTS Offspring Performance 1995 1996 Larval survival LC better NSD Larval growth NSD LC better Time to metamorphosis LC better (shorter) LC better (shorter) NSD = no significant difference; LC better = offspring of LC males superior to offspring of SC males. The Preservation of Genetic Variation  Neutral variation is genetic variation that does not confer a selective advantage or disadvantage  Various mechanisms help to preserve genetic variation in a population Diploidy  Diploidy maintains genetic variation in the form of hidden recessive alleles  Heterozygotes can carry recessive alleles that are hidden from the effects of selection Balancing Selection  Balancing selection occurs when natural selection maintains stable frequencies of two or more phenotypic forms in a population  Balancing selection includes  Heterozygote advantage  Frequency-dependent selection Heterozygote Advantage  Occurs when heterozygotes have a higher fitness than do both homozygotes  Natural selection tends to maintain two or more alleles at that locus  The sickle-cell allele causes mutations in hemoglobin but also confers malaria resistance Figure 23.17 Key Frequencies of the sickle-cell allele 0–2.5% 2.5–5.0% Distribution of malaria caused by Plasmodium falciparum (a parasitic unicellular eukaryote) 5.0–7.5% 7.5–10.0% 10.0–12.5% >12.5% Frequency-Dependent Selection  In frequency-dependent selection, the fitness of a phenotype declines if it becomes too common in the population  Selection can favor whichever phenotype is less common in a population  For example, frequency-dependent selection selects for approximately equal numbers of “right-mouthed” and “left-mouthed” scale-eating fish Figure 23.18 “Left-mouthed” P. microlepis 1.0 Frequency of “left-mouthed” individuals “Right-mouthed” P. microlepis 0.5 0 1981 ’82 ’83 ’84 ’85 ’86 ’87 ’88 ’89 ’90 Sample year Natural Selection Cannot Fashion Perfect Organisms  Selection can act only on existing variations  Evolution is limited by historical constraints  Adaptations are often compromises  Chance, natural selection, and the environment interact Figure 23.19
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            