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AP Biology Evolution of Populations Doonesbury - Sunday February 8, 2004
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AP Biology Populations evolve Natural selection acts on individuals differential survival “survival of the fittest” differential reproductive success who bears more offspring Populations evolve genetic makeup of population changes over time favorable traits (greater fitness) become more common Presence of lactate dehydrogenase Mummichog
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AP Biology Changes in populations Bent Grass on toxic mine site Pocket Mice in desert lava flows Pesticide molecule Insect cell membrane Target site Resistant target site Insecticide resistance Target site Decreased number of target sites
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AP Biology Individuals DON’T evolve!!!
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AP Biology Individuals DON’T evolve… Individuals survive or don’t survive… Populations evolve Individuals are selected
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AP Biology Fitness Survival & Reproductive success individuals with one phenotype leave more surviving offspring Body size & egg laying in water striders
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AP Biology Natural selection Natural selection adapts a population to its environment a changing environment climate change food source availability new predators or diseases combinations of alleles that provide “fitness” increase in the population
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AP Biology Variation impacts natural selection Natural selection requires a source of variation within the population there have to be differences some individuals must be more fit than others
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AP Biology 5 Agents of evolutionary change MutationGene Flow Genetic DriftSelection Non-random mating
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AP Biology 1. Mutation & Variation Mutation creates variation new mutations are constantly appearing Mutation changes DNA sequence changes amino acid sequence? changes protein? changes structure? changes function? changes in protein may change phenotype & therefore change fitness
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AP Biology 2. Gene Flow Movement of individuals & alleles in & out of populations seed & pollen distribution by wind & insect migration of animals sub-populations may have different allele frequencies causes genetic mixing across regions reduce differences between populations
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AP Biology Human evolution today Gene flow in human populations is increasing today transferring alleles between populations Are we moving towards a blended world?
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AP Biology 3. Non-random mating Sexual selection
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AP Biology Sex & Variation Sex spreads variation one ancestor can have many descendants sex causes recombination offspring have new combinations of traits = new phenotypes Sexual reproduction recombines alleles into new arrangements in every offspring 14
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AP Biology Warbler finch Tree finches Ground finches 4. Genetic drift Effect of chance events founder effect small group splinters off & starts a new colony bottleneck some factor (disaster) reduces population to small number & then population recovers & expands again
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AP Biology Founder effect When a new population is started by only a few individuals some rare alleles may be at high frequency; others may be missing skew the gene pool of new population human populations that started from small group of colonists example: colonization of New World
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AP Biology Distribution of blood types Distribution of the O type blood allele in native populations of the world reflects original settlement
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AP Biology Distribution of blood types Distribution of the B type blood allele in native populations of the world reflects original migration
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AP Biology Out of Africa Likely migration paths of humans out of Africa Many patterns of human traits reflect this migration 50,000ya 10-20,000ya
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AP Biology Bottleneck effect When large population is drastically reduced by a disaster famine, natural disaster, loss of habitat… loss of variation by chance event alleles lost from gene pool not due to fitness narrows the gene pool
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AP Biology Cheetahs All cheetahs share a small number of alleles less than 1% diversity as if all cheetahs are identical twins 2 bottlenecks 10,000 years ago Ice Age last 100 years poaching & loss of habitat
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AP Biology Conservation issues Bottlenecking is an important concept in conservation biology of endangered species loss of alleles from gene pool reduces variation reduces adaptability Breeding programs must consciously outcross Peregrine Falcon Golden Lion Tamarin
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AP Biology 5. Natural selection Differential survival & reproduction due to changing environmental conditions climate change food source availability predators, parasites, diseases toxins combinations of alleles that provide “fitness” increase in the population adaptive evolutionary change
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AP Biology 5 Agents of evolutionary change MutationGene Flow Genetic DriftSelection Non-random mating
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AP Biology Measuring Evolution of Populations 25
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AP Biology Populations & gene pools Concepts a population is a localized group of interbreeding individuals gene pool is collection of alleles in the population remember difference between alleles & genes! allele frequency is how common is that allele in the population how many A vs. a in whole population 26
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AP Biology Evolution of populations Evolution = change in allele frequencies in a population hypothetical: what would it be like if allele frequencies didn’t change? non-evolving population 1. very large population size (no genetic drift) 2. no migration (movement in or out) 3. no mutation (no genetic change) 4. random mating (no sexual selection) 5. no natural selection (no selection) 27
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AP Biology Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium Hypothetical, non-evolving population preserves allele frequencies Serves as a model natural populations rarely in H-W equilibrium useful model to measure if forces are acting on a population measuring evolutionary change W. Weinberg physician G.H. Hardy mathematician 28
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AP Biology Hardy-Weinberg theorem Alleles assume 2 alleles = B, b frequency of dominant allele (B) = p frequency of recessive allele (b) = q frequencies must add to 100%, so: p + q = 1 bbBbBB 29
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AP Biology Hardy-Weinberg theorem Individuals frequency of homozygous dominant: p x p = p 2 frequency of homozygous recessive: q x q = q 2 frequency of heterozygotes: (p x q) + (q x p) = 2pq frequencies of all individuals must add to 100%, so: p 2 + 2pq + q 2 = 1 bbBbBB 30
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AP Biology Using Hardy-Weinberg equation q 2 (bb): 16/100 =.16 0.4 q (b): √.16 = 0.4 0.6 p (B): 1 - 0.4 = 0.6 q 2 (bb): 16/100 =.16 0.4 q (b): √.16 = 0.4 0.6 p (B): 1 - 0.4 = 0.6 population: 100 cats 84 black, 16 white How many of each genotype? population: 100 cats 84 black, 16 white How many of each genotype? bbBbBB p 2 =.36 2pq=.48 q 2 =.16 Must assume population is in H-W equilibrium! 31
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AP Biology Using Hardy-Weinberg equation bbBbBB p 2 =.36 2pq=.48 q 2 =.16 Assuming H-W equilibrium Sampled data bbBbBB p 2 =.74 2pq=.10 q 2 =.16 How do you explain the data? p 2 =.20 2pq=.64 q 2 =.16 How do you explain the data? Null hypothesis 32
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AP Biology How do allele frequencies change? Think of all the factors that would keep a population out of H-W equilibrium! 33
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AP Biology Real world application of H-W Frequency of allele in human population Example: What % of human population carries allele for PKU (phenylketonuria) Should you screen prospective parents? ~ 1 in 10,000 babies born in the US is born with PKU results in mental retardation, if untreated disease is caused by a recessive allele PKU = homozygous recessive (aa) 34
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AP Biology H-W & PKU disease frequency of homozygous recessive individuals q 2 (aa) = 1 in 10,000 = 0.0001 0.01 frequency of recessive allele (q): q = √0.0001 = 0.01 frequency of dominant allele (p): p (A) = 1 – 0.01 = 0.99 frequency of carriers, heterozygotes: 2pq = 2 x (0.99 x 0.01) = 0.0198 = ~2% ~2% of the US population carries the PKU allele 300,000,000 x.02 = 6,000,000 people 35
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AP Biology Hardy-Weinberg Lab data 36
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AP Biology Hardy Weinberg Lab: No Selection total alleles = 48.6 p (A): (6+6+18)/48 =.6.4 q (a): 18/48 =.4 total alleles = 48.6 p (A): (6+6+18)/48 =.6.4 q (a): 18/48 =.4 24 individuals 48 alleles 0.5 A: 0.5 0.5 a: 0.5 24 individuals 48 alleles 0.5 A: 0.5 0.5 a: 0.5 Original population AA6 Aa18 aa0 How do you explain these data? Case #1 37
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AP Biology Hardy Weinberg Lab: Selection total alleles = 48.9 p (A): (19+19+5)/48 =.9.1 q (a): 5/48 =.1 total alleles = 48.9 p (A): (19+19+5)/48 =.9.1 q (a): 5/48 =.1 24 individuals 48 alleles 0.5 A: 0.5 0.5 a: 0.5 24 individuals 48 alleles 0.5 A: 0.5 0.5 a: 0.5 Original population AA19 Aa5 aa0 How do you explain these data? Case #2 38
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AP Biology Hardy Weinberg Lab: total alleles = 48.7 p (A): (9+9+15)/48 =.7.3 q (a): 15/48 =.3 total alleles = 48.7 p (A): (9+9+15)/48 =.7.3 q (a): 15/48 =.3 24 individuals 48 alleles 0.5 A: 0.5 0.5 a: 0.5 24 individuals 48 alleles 0.5 A: 0.5 0.5 a: 0.5 Original population AA9 Aa15 aa0 How do you explain these data? Case #3 Heterozygote Advantage 39
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AP Biology Hardy Weinberg Lab: Genetic Drift 8 individuals 16 alleles 0.5 A: 0.5 0.5 a: 0.5 8 individuals 16 alleles 0.5 A: 0.5 0.5 a: 0.5 Original population How do you explain these data? AA310 Aa563 aa015 pq Case #4 40
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AP Biology Hardy Weinberg Lab: Genetic Drift total alleles = 16.7 p (A): (3+3+5)/16 =.7.3 q (a): 5/16 =.3 8 individuals 16 alleles 0.5 A: 0.5 0.5 a: 0.5 8 individuals 16 alleles 0.5 A: 0.5 0.5 a: 0.5 Original population How do you explain these data? AA310 Aa554 aa015 pq Case #4.7.3 41
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AP Biology Hardy Weinberg Lab: Genetic Drift total alleles = 16.7 p (A): (3+3+5)/16 =.7.3 q (a): 5/16 =.3 total alleles = 16.7 p (A): (3+3+5)/16 =.7.3 q (a): 5/16 =.3 8 individuals 16 alleles 0.5 A: 0.5 0.5 a: 0.5 8 individuals 16 alleles 0.5 A: 0.5 0.5 a: 0.5 Original population How do you explain these data? total alleles = 14.5 p (A): (1+1+5)/14 =.5.5 q (a): (5+1+1)/14 =.5 total alleles = 14.5 p (A): (1+1+5)/14 =.5.5 q (a): (5+1+1)/14 =.5 AA310 Aa554 aa015 p.7.5 q.3.5 Case #4 42
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AP Biology Hardy Weinberg Lab: Genetic Drift total alleles = 16.7 p (A): (3+3+5)/16 =.7.3 q (a): 5/16 =.3 total alleles = 16.7 p (A): (3+3+5)/16 =.7.3 q (a): 5/16 =.3 8 individuals 16 alleles 0.5 A: 0.5 0.5 a: 0.5 8 individuals 16 alleles 0.5 A: 0.5 0.5 a: 0.5 Original population How do you explain these data? total alleles = 14.5 p (A): (1+1+5)/14 =.5.5 q (a): (5+1+1)/14 =.5 total alleles = 14.5 p (A): (1+1+5)/14 =.5.5 q (a): (5+1+1)/14 =.5 total alleles = 18.2 p (A): 4/18 =.2.8 q (a): (4+5+5)/18 =.8 total alleles = 18.2 p (A): 4/18 =.2.8 q (a): (4+5+5)/18 =.8 AA310 Aa554 aa015 p.7.5.2 q.3.5.8 Case #4 43
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AP Biology Essential Questions How do populations change over time? What factors can cause changes in populations over time? How did modern understandings of genetics impact evolutionary thought? 44
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