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Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &

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Presentation on theme: "Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &"— Presentation transcript:

1 Mechanisms of Evolution

2 Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment & contribute equally to the next generation 1. Five conditions for this to occur a. No Genetic Drift b. No Gene Flow c. No Mutations d. Mating must be random e. No Natural Selection

3 Genetic Drift B. Chance occurrences can cause an allele to become more or less common 1. Founder Effect: result of migration (Darwin’s finches) Ex. Amish and Mennonites: people rarely marry outside their own communities; Old Order Amish—high frequency of 6-finger dwarfism—can trace ancestry back to one of the founders of the order 2. Bottleneck: result of a dramatic reduction in population size and then rebounds; might be a possible factor in the potential extinction of a species Ex. Cheetahs in Africa are so genetically similar they appear inbred; researchers think there was a bottleneck 10,000 yrs ago, and then again 100 yrs ago

4 Gene Flow C. Rate at which genes enter or leave the population— random migration naturally increases variation

5 Nonrandom Mating D. Organisms usually mate w/individuals in close proximity which promotes inbreeding

6 Mutation E. Some are harmful, some are advantageous

7 Natural Selection F. Acts to select those individuals that are best adapted for a particular environment

8 Reproductive Isolation G. Prevents gene flow among populations Ex. 2 species can mate to produce a hybrid which is sterile (liger) **Other forms of isolation are more specific forms of this

9 Speciation H. Population diverges and new species is reproductively isolated

10 Patterns of Evolution A. Adaptive Radiation: many related species evolve from a single species (Darwin’s finches)—usually due to different environments Ex. guppies in a pool on the same river B. Coevolution: 2 or more species change together C. Convergent Evolution: 2 unrelated species have similar characteristics D. Rate of Speciation: usually is gradual, but there have been periods of abrupt transitions

11 Adaptive Radiation

12 Coevolution Acacia ants live in thorns of acacia tree. Plant make substance used by ants as food. Ants defend tree from herbivores by attacking/stinging any animal that brushes up against the tree

13 Convergent Evolution

14 Rate of Speciation


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