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Friday 4/18 LT: Explain how natural selection on single-gene traits can lead to changes in allele frequencies ET: Create a vocabulary list for section 17.1 Gene pool Relative frequency Single-gene trait Polygenic trait
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Wed. 2/13 – 16.1 LT: 1.Explain what a gene pool is 2.Identify the main sources of inheritable variation in a population 3.State what determines how a phenotype is expressed ET: Outline sections 16.1 and 16.2 Highlight headings and underline new vocabulary words (the bolded ones) These must be quality outlines if you want to receive full credit
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Friday 4/18 – Genes and Variation _______________________________________________________ Daily Objective: By the end of today I should be able to… Explain what a gene pool is Identify that main sources of inheritable variation in a population Entrance Activity: What are the 2 important factors that Darwin was unable to explain? (17.1) Why was he unable to explain them?
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Gene Pool: The combined genetic information of all the members of a particular population All the members of a population may interbreed so they share a group of common genes
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Relative Frequency: The number of times an allele occurs in a gene pool Pg. 483 – How many alleles for black fur are there vs. alleles for white fur?
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What are the 2 main sources of genetic variation? 1.Mutations: Any change in a sequence of DNA Q: how do mutations occur? radiation, environment, replication of DNA 2.Gene Shuffling: Your 23 pairs of chromosomes can produce 8.4 million different combinations of genes! Q: how do chromosomes get arranged so differently? Independent assortment and crossover
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The number of phenotypes produced for a given trait depends on how many genes control the trait. Single-Gene Traits: Controlled by a single gene that has 2 alleles Ex. Widows peak pg. 395 Polygenic traits: Controlled by 2 or more genes, each with 2 or more alleles Ex. Height Polygenic traits produce a bell-shaped curve when graphed – “normal distribution.”
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Create a data table to record the height of each individual in the room Create a graph using frequency and height, just like the one on pg. 396
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Friday, February 15 th, 2013 _______________________________________________________ Daily Objective: By the end of today I should be able to… Explain genetic drift Describe the conditions necessary for genetic equilibrium to be maintained. Entrance Activity: What are the 3 ways that natural selection can affect the distributions of phenotypes
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Natural Selection on… Single-gene Traits: one form of the trait all of the sudden increases fitness, allele frequency will change and evolution will take place Polygenic Traits: Natural selection can affect the distribution of phenotypes by 1.Directional Selection 2.Stabilizing Selection 3.Disruptive Selection
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Directional Selection When nature selects individuals at one end of the bell curve as the fittest
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Directional Selection Food becomes scarce. Key Low mortality, high fitness High mortality, low fitness
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Stabilizing Selection When nature selects individuals in the middle of the curve as more fit and the bell narrows
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Key Percentage of Population Birth Weight Selection against both extremes keep curve narrow and in same place. Low mortality, high fitness High mortality, low fitness Stabilizing Selection
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Disruptive Selection When nature selects individuals at opposites ends of the curve as more fit.
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Genetic Drift In small populations, individuals with a specific trait may leave more desendents, just by chance. When allele frequency is altered by the migration of a small population it is called the – “founder effect”
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Evolution vs. Genetic Equilibrium 5 conditions can disturb equilibrium and cause evolution to occur… Hardy-Weinberg principle: Allele frequencies in a population will remain constant unless one or more factors cause those frequencies to change. Genetic Equilibrium
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5 conditions that must be constant for equilibrium … If conditions are not met, the population will evolve. 1.Random Mating: All members of the population must have an equal opportunity to produce offspring. An example of this condition not being met: Female birds usually select their mates based on plumage… Colorful plumage is selected for…
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2. Large Population: Large populations are less likely to be changed through Genetic Drift REVIEW!!! What is genetic drift?
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3.No movement into or out of the population …because individuals may bring new alleles into a population A population’s gene pool has to be kept together and separate from the gene pools of other populations
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4. No mutations Mutations introduce new alleles, which changes the frequencies
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5. No natural selection All genotypes in the population must have equal probabilities of survival and reproduction. No selective pressures!!
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Thursday. 2/23 – 16.3 LT: Identify conditions necessary for a new species to evolve Describe the process of speciation ET: What factors are involved in the formation of a new species? – Behavioral, geographic, and temporal isolation
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Speciation The formation of new species based on a significant change in allele frequency
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As new species evolve, populations become reproductively isolated from each other Reproductive isolation: when the members of two populations cannot interbreed and produce fertile offspring
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Behavioral Isolation 2 populations are capable of interbreeding but have differences in courtship rituals or other types of behaviors Ex: Eastern Meadowlark and Western Meadowlark
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Geographic Isolation Two populations are separated by geographic barriers such as rivers, mountains or bodies of water. Ex: Abert squirrel and Kaibab squirrel
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Temporal Isolation Common water frog Rana esculenta BioEd Online 2 or more species reproduce at different times Ex: different frog species live and breed in the same pond, but they reproduce at different times of the year.
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Speciation in Darwin’s Finches Read and summarize steps 1-6 on pg. 408 Compare your steps to fig. 16-17 pg. 410 Analyzing Data: complete the activity on pg. 408 “How Are These Fish Related” Answer #1-4 in NB
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Tuesday 2/28/2012 LT: Last day to review for exam! *Test Tomorrow
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