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1 Genes Within Populations Chapter 21
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2 Outline Gene Variation Hardy Weinberg Principle Agents of Evolutionary Change Measuring Fitness Interactions Among Evolutionary Forces Forms of Selection – Selection on Color in Guppies Limits to Selection
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3 Gene Variation is Raw Material Evolution - change over time Evolution is descent with modification – Darwin Through time, species accumulate differences such that ancestral and descendent species are not identical.
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4 Gene Variation is Raw Material Natural selection and evolutionary change – Some individuals in a population possess certain inherited characteristics that play a role in producing more surviving offspring than individuals without those characteristics. The population gradually includes more individuals with advantageous characteristics.
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5 Darwin versus Lamarck
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6 Gene Variation In Nature Measuring levels of genetic variation – blood groups – 30 blood grp genes – Enzymes – 5% heterozygous Enzyme polymorphism – A locus with more variation than can be explained by mutation is termed polymorphic. Natural populations tend to have more polymorphic loci than can be accounted for by mutation. 15% Drosophila 5-8% in vertebrates
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7 Hardy-Weinberg Principle Population genetics - study of properties of genes in populations – blending inheritance phenotypically intermediate (phenotypic inheritance) was widely accepted new genetic variants would quickly be diluted
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8 Hardy-Weinberg Principle Hardy-Weinberg - original proportions of genotypes in a population will remain constant from generation to generation – Sexual reproduction (meiosis and fertilization) alone will not change allelic (genotypic) proportions.
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9 Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Population of cats n=100 16 white and 84 black bb = white B_ = black Can we figure out the allelic frequencies of individuals BB and Bb?
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10 Hardy-Weinberg Principle Necessary assumptions Allelic frequencies would remain constant if… – population size is very large – random mating – no mutation – no gene input from external sources – no selection occurring
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11 Hardy-Weinberg Principle Calculate genotype frequencies with a binomial expansion (p+q) 2 = p 2 + 2pq + q 2 p2 = individuals homozygous for first allele 2pq = individuals heterozygous for alleles q2 = individuals homozygous for second allele
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12 p 2 + 2pq + q 2 and p+q = 1 (always two alleles) 16 cats white = 16bb then (q 2 = 0.16) This we know we can see and count!!!!! If p + q = 1 then we can calculate p from q 2 Q = square root of q 2 = q √.16 q=0.4 p + q = 1 then p =.6 (.6 +.4 = 1) P 2 =.36 All we need now are those that are heterozygous (2pq) (2 x.6 x.4)=0.48.36 +.48 +.16 Hardy-Weinberg Principle
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13 Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium
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14 Five Agents of Evolutionary Change Mutation – Mutation rates are generally so low they have little effect on Hardy-Weinberg proportions of common alleles. ultimate source of genetic variation Gene flow – movement of alleles from one population to another tend to homogenize allele frequencies
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15 Five Agents of Evolutionary Change Nonrandom mating – assortative mating - phenotypically similar individuals mate Causes frequencies of particular genotypes to differ from those predicted by Hardy-Weinberg.
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16 Five Agents of Evolutionary Change Genetic drift – statistical accidents. – Frequencies of particular alleles may change by chance alone. important in small populations founder effect - few individuals found new population (small allelic pool) bottleneck effect - drastic reduction in population, and gene pool size
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17 Genetic Drift - Bottleneck Effect
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18 Five Agents of Evolutionary Change Selection – Only agent that produces adaptive evolutionary change – artificial - breeders exert selection – natural - nature exerts selection variation must exist among individuals variation must result in differences in numbers of viable offspring produced variation must be genetically inherited natural selection is a process, and evolution is an outcome
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19 Five Agents of Evolutionary Change Selection pressures: – avoiding predators – matching climatic condition – pesticide resistance
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20 Measuring Fitness Fitness is defined by evolutionary biologists as the number of surviving offspring left in the next generation. – relative measure Selection favors phenotypes with the greatest fitness.
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21 Interactions Among Evolutionary Forces Levels of variation retained in a population may be determined by the relative strength of different evolutionary processes. Gene flow versus natural selection – Gene flow can be either a constructive or a constraining force. Allelic frequencies reflect a balance between gene flow and natural selection.
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22 Natural Selection Can Maintain Variation Frequency-dependent selection – Phenotype fitness depends on its frequency within the population. Negative frequency-dependent selection favors rare phenotypes. Positive frequency-dependent selection eliminates variation. Oscillating selection – Selection favors different phenotypes at different times.
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23 Heterozygote Advantage Heterozygote advantage will favor heterozygotes, and maintain both alleles instead of removing less successful alleles from a population. – Sickle cell anemia Homozygotes exhibit severe anemia, have abnormal blood cells, and usually die before reproductive age. Heterozygotes are less susceptible to malaria.
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24 Sickle Cell and Malaria
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25 Forms of Selection Disruptive selection – Selection eliminates intermediate types. Directional selection – Selection eliminates one extreme from a phenotypic array. Stabilizing selection – Selection acts to eliminate both extremes from an array of phenotypes.
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26 Kinds of Selection
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27 Selection on Color in Guppies Guppies are found in small northeastern streams in South America and in nearby mountainous streams in Trinidad. – Due to dispersal barriers, guppies can be found in pools below waterfalls with high predation risk, or pools above waterfalls with low predation risk.
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28 Evolution of Coloration in Guppies
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29 Selection on Color in Guppies High predation environment - Males exhibit drab coloration and tend to be relatively small and reproduce at a younger age. Low predation environment - Males display bright coloration, a larger number of spots, and tend to be more successful at defending territories. – In the absence of predators, larger, more colorful fish may produce more offspring.
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30 Evolutionary Change in Spot Number
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31 Limits to Selection Genes have multiple effects – pleiotropy Evolution requires genetic variation – Intense selection may remove variation from a population at a rate greater than mutation can replenish. thoroughbred horses Gene interactions affect allelic fitness – epistatic interactions
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32 Summary Gene Variation Hardy Weinberg Principle Agents of Evolutionary Change Measuring Fitness Interactions Among Evolutionary Forces Forms of Selection – Selection on Color in Guppies Limits to Selection
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