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11.2 Natural Selection in Populations Sponge Please copy down these terms Frequency: refers to the number of times a specific thing occurs Mean: is the average, and the point where the frequency is the highest Range: is the difference of interval between the smallest and largest values in a frequency distribution. Median: Is the middle value in a distribution, with and equal number of values above and below. ex: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Mode: is the value occurring most frequently ex: 2 4 6 2 7 2 7 8 2 = 2
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11.2 Natural Selection in Populations Objectives 8a: Students know how natural selection determines the differential survival of groups of organisms 7.3a: Students know both genetic variation and environmental factors are causes of evolution and diversity of organisms.
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11.2 Natural Selection in Populations KEY CONCEPT Populations, not individuals, evolve.
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11.2 Natural Selection in Populations Natural selection acts on distributions of traits. A normal distribution graphs as a bell-shaped curve. Traits not undergoing natural selection have a normal distribution. – highest frequency near mean value – frequencies decrease toward each extreme value Extremes
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11.2 Natural Selection in Populations Phenotypic distribution: A graph that shows the frequency of each phenotype for a trait in a population You can see how common each phenotype is in a population AND whether or not the population is undergoing natural selection for that trait
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11.2 Natural Selection in Populations Natural selection can change the distribution of a trait in one of three ways. Microevolution is evolution within a population. –observable change in the allele frequencies –can result from natural selection
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11.2 Natural Selection in Populations Natural selection can take one of three paths. –Directional selection favors phenotypes at one extreme. –Ex: antibiotics have led to this type of selection
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11.2 Natural Selection in Populations –Stabilizing selection favors the intermediate (mean/middle) phenotype. Ex: gall fly
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11.2 Natural Selection in Populations –Disruptive selection favors both extreme phenotypes, while individuals with intermediate phenotypes are selected against by something in nature. Ex: Lazuli buntings
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