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Evolution of Populations
Genes & Variation--What causes Genetic Variation in Populations?
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Mutations Gene Shuffling Crossing Over
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Gene Pools and Allele Frequencies
What is a gene pool? (All of the genes and information from all members of a particular species) What are Allele Frequencies? (How many times that allele occurs in the gene pool---eg. Black fur B = 40%)
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Sources of Genetic Variation
Mutations Gene Shuffling chromosomes can produce 8.4 million different combinations of genes Crossing Over -- Further, “Shufffles the deck” Producing more combinations
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New Combinations of Alleles
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Single Genes & Polygenic Traits
Single Gene Traits AA, Aa, aa Polygenic Traits AABBCC, AaBbCc (3 Genes) >
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Natural Selection on Single gene Traits
Can Lead to changes in the Allele Frequencies and consequently----> Evolution Example--Black and brown lizards Red (mutation) doesn’t survive as well on a dark background
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Natural Selection on Polygenic traits
Can affect the distributions of phenotypes in 3 ways--- 1) Directional selection 2) Stabilizing selection 3) disruptive selection
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Stabilizing Selection -->Selects for the average form
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Directional Selection -->Selects for an extreme
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Diversifying Selection--Selects for both extremes
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Natural Selection on Single Gene Traits
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Genetic Drift
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Genetic Drift in The Amish
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Example of Genetic Drift
An example is the frequency of total color-blindness among the inhabitants of Pingelap, an island in Micronesia. In approximately 1775, a typhoon reduced the population of the island to only 20. Among survivors, one of them was heterozygous for achromatopsia.
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After few generations, the prevalence of achromatopsia is 5% of population and 30% as carriers (by comparison, in the United States, only 0.003% of the population has complete achromatopsia.
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Amish polydactyl (6 fingered) Achondroplastic Dwarf
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Evolution vs. Genetic Equilibrium
Evolution = Genetic Change What does Genetic Equilibrium = ? NO CHANGE ! POPULATIONS WOULD STAY THE SAME, “IN EQUILIBRIUM”
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Remember the Blue-footed Booby?
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Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium
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Conditions for Equilibrium (Hardy--Weinberg)
What would the conditions have to be for no change? ie. No Evolution 1. No mutation 2. No natural selection 3. Large population 4. All members of the population breed
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5. Random mating 6. everyone produces the same number of offspring 7. no migration in or out of the population
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Speciation
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Isolating Mechanisms GEOGRAPHIC REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIORAL TEMPORAL
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GEOGRAPHIC ISOLATION Leads to--> Reproductive Isolation
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REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION
Species can no longer reproduce with the, “New” species Eg. 2 species of fruitflies Guava or Banana? The evolution of different mating location, mating time, or mating rituals:
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TEMPORAL ISOLATION Mating at different times of the year Other frogs--
Green frogs--> April Bullfrogs--> June
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BEHAVIORAL ISOLATION Courtship rituals--(Dances, Flashes,)
Food preferences
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Firefly--> Flashes
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Misconception: “Natural selection gives organisms what they ‘need.’ ”
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