1.Determine whether evolution occurs by mechanisms other than selection. 2.Compare and contrast population outcomes resulting from selection versus random events. Objectives
Can evolution occur by mechanisms other than selection? 1.Genetic drift; 2.Gene flow. Campbell, Chapter 23, pp
Plant Scenario 1: Initial Population
Late Spring Freeze
Who dies?...and therefore, does not reproduce.....
Consequence of Late Spring Freeze? Aincreasedecrease Bincreaseno change C Ddecreaseincrease Edecreaseno change Clicker Q1
Survivors
Survivors Reproduce All Blue Population
Change in allele frequencies in a population over time due to random (stochastic) events in environment Plant Scenario 1: Genetic Drift
Q: What if blue was better able to survive the effects of a spring freeze? Plant Scenario 2: Initial Population
Q: What if blue was better able to survive the effects of a spring freeze? LATE SPRING FREEZE
Q: What if blue was better able to survive the effects of a spring freeze? Who dies?...and therefore, does not reproduce... LATE SPRING FREEZE
Q: What if blue was better able to survive the effects of a spring freeze? Late Spring Freeze Who dies?...and therefore, does not reproduce
Survivors
Survivors Reproduce The outcome is: All Blue Population. Same end result as Scenario 1. Is the mechanism the same?
Plant Scenario 3: Initial Population A squirrel drops a seed from a fruit it found across the road.
Immigration: “new” alleles are introduced into the population by interbreeding
What happens over time...
Gene Flow Physical movement of alleles into or out of a population by immigration/emigration.
Summary: Mechanisms of Evolution Selection (natural, sexual, artificial) Genetic Drift (random events in environment) Gene Flow (immigration/emigration)
Scales of Evolution Microevolution Macroevolution Small scale changes in allele frequencies Variability in population traits Large-scale changes Origin of new species
What is a species? In your group, write down a definition of species.
What is a species? Biological Species Concept: – Population of organisms capable of interbreeding AND producing viable and fertile offspring Can you think of any exceptions to this definition? Campbell, Chapter 24, pp
Could speciation happen here?
A road is built that prevents pollen exchange.
Resulting subpopulations can’t interbreed due to barrier
Divergence
Accumulation of genetic change over time (due to drift, flow, different selective agents, random mutations)
If can no longer interbreed with then the 2 subpopulations have achieved reproductive isolation new species!
Reminder: Scales of Evolution Microevolution Macroevolution Small scale changes in allele frequencies Variability in population traits Large-scale changes Origin of new species
Speciation Origination of new species resulting from reproductive isolation of populations that have diverged