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Published byFrederica Davidson Modified over 8 years ago
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Bellwork Define in your own words Allele Homozygous Heterozygous Recessive Dominant
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Hardy-Weinberg If a population is not evolving, do you expect the genes (alleles) to change in a population in the next generation?
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Hardy-Weinberg If a population is not evolving, then gene frequencies should stay constant in a population from generation to generation. Parent generation Offspring
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Why do scientists use Hardy-Weinberg To determine if a population is evolving – scientists see if gene frequencies in populations reflect Hardy-Weinberg expectations, if not, than the population is evolving.
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Criteria for Hardy-Weinberg No Mutations Random mating No Selection Extremely large population No Gene Flow
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Mutation Rates are very low in nature 1-10 times per 100,000 cell divisions Mutation is not common, but it is the source of variation and thus makes evolution possible
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Nonrandom mating Mating with individuals that live nearby or with related individuals Does not change frequency of alleles, but increases the proportion of homozygotes in a population
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Natural Selection Individuals that have physical or behavioral traits that better suit their environment are more likely to survive and will reproduce more successfully than those that do not have such traits. Ex. Sickle cell anemia and malaria
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Natural Selection Natural selection is the most powerful mechanism for genetic change Natural selection acts on phenotypes not genotypes Ex. Hemophilia expressed in homozygous recessive individuals, would only select against infected individuals not carriers Usually, 1 recessive homozygous individual per 100, and 18 heterozygous per 100.
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Polygenic trait A trait that is influenced by several genes Example: Human height and human skin color Normal distribution
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Types of selection Directional selection The frequency of a trait moves in one direction
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Types of selection Stabilizing selection The distribution of a trait becomes narrower
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Types of selection Disruptive selection When conditions favor individuals at both extremes of a phenotype
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Large population size: If not, it can lead to genetic drift Genetic Drift: The change in allele frequencies due to chance
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Types of genetic drift The Founder Effect – When few individuals become isolated from the larger population Bottleneck Effect – A severe drop in population size because of a sudden change in the environment, so only a few survive (but not because they are more fit for their environment)
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Gene Flow The movement of individuals from one population to another, which may cause genetic change.
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Using Hardy-Weinberg Equation p 2 + 2pq + p 2 = 1 Think of all alleles being in a “pool” If the frequency of allele “p” is.8 and “q” is.2 What percentage of the population are heterozygous 2pq = 2(.8)(.2) = 32%
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Using Hardy-Weinberg Equation p 2 + 2pq + p 2 = 1 Think of all alleles being in a “pool” If the frequency of allele “p” is.8 and “q” is.2 What percentage of the population are homozygous dominant (p) p 2 =.8 2 = 64%
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Using Hardy-Weinberg Equation p 2 + 2pq + p 2 = 1 Think of all alleles being in a “pool” If the frequency of allele “p” is.8 and “q” is.2 What percentage of the population are homozygous recessive (q) q 2 =.2 2 = 4%
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If 4% are homozygous recessive, 64% are homozygous dominant and 32% are heterozygous, then… 4% + 64% + 32% = 100%
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