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Published byGary Cobb Modified over 9 years ago
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Evolution is the change in the inherited traits of a population of organisms through successive generations Two factors at work: Processes that constantly introduce variation in traits Processes that make particular variants become more common or rare
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Variation is introduced to a population’s gene pool by: Mutation: a heritable change in the nucleotide sequence of the genetic nucleic acid Gene flow: introduction or loss of new alleles into the population through immigration or emigration Genetic drift: stochastic shifts in allele frequencies in small populations Natural selection: change in allele frequencies over generations due to differential survival and reproductive success of genotypes
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Point mutations are caused by random errors in the copying process (during transcription) Point mutation
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Chromosomal mutations occur when chromosomes fail to properly separate during meiosis Structural Modification Irregular Number
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Scientists disagree about how and why genes mutate For a long time they believed that genetic mutations were unrelated to whatever consequences such mutations would have on the species. Researchers have found evidence that cells might be able to "choose" which mutations will occur to give them an advantage in stressful situations. For example, when starving, certain bacterial cells might generate multiple mutations. If the mutated cell survives, the mutation is passed on; cells that die take their unsuccessful mutations with them. Flexibility in antibody production
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Wilson & Bossert, 1971
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In each generation, some individuals may, just by chance, leave behind a few more descendents than other individuals The genes of the next generation will be the genes of the “lucky” individuals, not necessarily the healthier or “better” individuals It happens to ALL populations—there’s no avoiding the vagaries of chance
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Fitness is a measure of the ability of an individual to produce viable offspring and contribute to future generations Individuals vary in their relative fitness due partly to genetic differences among individuals and partly to environmental influences Individuals with greatest fitness will contribute disproportionately to subsequent generations
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As the environment changes so do the fitness values of the genotypes Some properties of fitness: Fitness is a property of a genotype, not of an individual or a population Individuals with the same genotype share the same fitness within the same environment Fitness is measured over one generation or more
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Natural selection may not produce a “perfectly-engineered” trait Reasons why natural selection might not produce perfection Lack of necessary genetic variation Constraints due to history Trade-offs
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Adaptation is the evolutionary process whereby a population becomes better suited to its habitat Important for an organism's survival Adaptations may be: Physiological Morphological Behavioral Adaptation is the result of natural selection
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An adaptation is a feature that is common in a population because it provides some improved function Adaptations are well fitted to their function A vestigial structure is a feature that was an adaptation for the organism’s ancestor, but that evolved to be non-functional because the organism’s environment changed
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What are selection pressures in an organism’s environment? Biotic factors Predation Competition Mutualism Abiotic factors Resource availability Physical conditions Chemical conditions
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Natural selection leads to adaptive radiation and speciation
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“natural” or anthropogenic…
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No predators Exponential growth Environmental and crop damage
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Introduced in 1950 Initially highly effective Reduced rabbits by 99% Now mortality rate is less than 50%
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Over many generations, mutations produce successive, small, random changes in traits, which are then filtered by natural selection and the beneficial changes retained Traits become suited to an organism's environment: these adjustments are called adaptations Ok: Survival of the fittest Better: those that can --- survive
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http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evosite/evo101/I IIDGeneticdrift.shtml http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evosite/evo101/I IIDGeneticdrift.shtml
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