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How Populations Evolve

How Populations Evolve. Chapter 7. Natural Selection?. On the following three slides, you will read statements based on student ideas about now natural selection works. Use your clickers to vote for whether you think that the statement IS or is NOT what scientists mean by “natural selection.”.

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How Populations Evolve

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  1. How Populations Evolve • Chapter 7

  2. Natural Selection? • On the following three slides, you will read statements based on student ideas about now natural selection works. Use your clickers to vote for whether you think that the statement IS or is NOT what scientists mean by “natural selection.”

  3. “ Our little toes aren’t necessary for walking. Because of this, some people think that they will get smaller each generation and eventually disappear from lack of use over time.” • This IS what scientists mean by natural selection • This is NOT what scientists mean by natural selection

  4. “Dark-colored grasshoppers resting on pale, dry grass stalks are more easily seen by predators than light-colored grasshoppers of the same species. Because the dark-colored grasshoppers have higher mortality, there will be fewer dark-colored grasshoppers each generation” • This IS what scientists mean by natural selection • This is NOT what scientists mean by natural selection

  5. “The flowering shrub called Hydrangea has flowers that are blue if the shrub is growing in acidic soil. If the same shrub is transplanted into alkaline soil, its blossoms will turn pink.” • This IS what scientists mean by natural selection • This is NOT what scientists mean by natural selection

  6. How Selection Works

  7. 1. Variation Exists • All populations vary as the result of the accumulation of small, random mutations over many generations.

  8. 2. Inheritance of traits • Inheritable traits (those coded for by genes) are passed directly to the offspring from the parents through geneticinformation.

  9. 3. Differential Survival • More offspring are born than can survive. Many offspring die young. Those with traits best suited to the environment are more likely, though not guaranteed, to survive.

  10. 4. Differential Reproduction • Some survivors fail to reproduce. Some have traits that better insure reproduction than others.

  11. 5. Differential Inheritance • Survivors that reproduce pass some of their traits on to their offspring. Those with favorable traits may pass those favorable traits on — or not.

  12. W O R K T O G E T H E R • People who work with feral cats have noticed that when cats are abandoned to the wild and have kittens, over several generations the kittens are more and more feral and more difficult to tame. Use what you have learned about natural selection to develop a brief explanation for this. Talk to your neighbor about your ideas.

  13. Natural Selection in Cats • Traits that ensure a domestic cat’s survival among humans: • Endearing qualities: purring, snuggling, being playful, cuteness. • Helpful qualities: rodent control.

  14. When domestic cats are abandoned: • Most die within two weeks from starvation, accident, or predation. The traits that help them in a domestic setting are useless in the wild. • The few that survive have the strongest feral instincts. • Av. feral lifespan: 2-4 years

  15. Selection’s Effects Generation 2 Generation 3 Generation 1

  16. As time passes... • With each generation, domestic traits are selected against, while feral traits are favored. • After several generations, even kittens that are captured young can be challenging to tame.

  17. Which of these is true? • Nature gives abandoned cats the traits that they need to live in the wild. • Only those few cats with traits that help them avoid predators and catch prey will survive and have offspring.

  18. Genes and Evolution • Genes are the units of heredity. • Genes are segments of DNA that code for proteins, which result in our set of traits. • Genes are passed from parent to offspring through the sex cells.

  19. Different “versions” of genes are alleles. • Dominant alleles are expressed in the phenotype (expressed trait) even if only one copy is inherited. • Recessive alleles are expressed only if two copies are inherited. “Genotype” is a description of the alleles for a given trait in an individual: BB, Bb, or bb

  20. Genetic basis of inheritance • Genotype -the genetic composition of an organism • Allele- the specific form of the gene BEY2 gene – controls pigmentation in the eye • Phenotype - the outward expression of genotype • Gene pool -the total of all alleles for all genes in a population

  21. You’re probably familiar with genetics in terms of following traits passed from parent to offspring and predicting the outcome. But how do we track traits passed from generation to generation across an entire population? How does population genetics work? Blackfin shark genotypes in the Gulf of Mexico. http://www.zoology.siu.edu/heist/blacktip.htm

  22. The Gene Pool Concept • The “gene pool” of a population is the entire collection of alleles for a given trait throughout a given population. • The word for all genes for all traits in an individual or population is genome.

  23. Causes of Genetic Change in a Population Mutation, genetic drift, and natural selection will, over time, change the genetics of both populations. Genetic change Genetic change

  24. Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium • Allele ratios in a gene pool will NOT change from generation to generation (that is, no evolution) ONLY if ALL of these things are true: • No mutation • Large population • No migration • No selection • Random mating

  25. Mutations • Small mutations appear randomly in populations. • The appearance of mutations changes allele ratios by • “breaking” functional alleles (as in genetic disorders) • adding new alleles

  26. Copy errors are rare, but given that genes are copied millions of times in a lifetime, errors can occur. • Mutagens in the environment can increase the error rate. • Small errors can create new alleles.

  27. Population size • In large populations, random events have a very small effect. • In small populations, because fewer individuals have any given trait, random events can have a larger effect. Changes in gene ratios caused by random events are called “genetic drift.”

  28. A population bottleneck is genetic drift.

  29. Founder effect is genetic drift.

  30. What does Founders Effect do to the gene pool of the new population? • Improves it by weeding out bad genes. • Creates new traits that the new population will need. • Makes it much smaller with less genetic variation.

  31. Why is a genetic bottleneck of concern to wildlife biologists bringing an endangered species back from near extinction? • Small populations have more mutations. • The small gene pool increases inbreeding and preservation of bad traits. • Much harder to find survivors for breeding programs.

  32. Migration • Migration into and out of a population can change gene ratios. • Immigrants can bring in new mutations, or a different ratio of alleles. • Emigrants may take away a high proportion of a certain allele. • Small population are more affected than large populations.

  33. Migration can lead to Founders Effect: Surtsey, Iceland Surfaced 14 Nov 1963 Moss: 1967 Puffin nests: 2004

  34. Selection • Selection may increase or decrease the frequency of certain alleles: • Directional selection: favors one end of a range over another. • Disruptive selection: disfavors the midrange. • Stabilizing selection: favors the mid-range.

  35. Natural selection: Differential survival. Changes allele frequency. Peppered moth

  36. Which of these is true? • Predation caused the Peppered Moths to develop new genes that they needed to survive. • Predation changed the gene frequencies already existing in the population.

  37. The phenotype on which selection acted in the Moth example was: • Predation • Level of pollution • Size of trees • Number of trees • Coloration pattern of moths

  38. The abiotic variable that influenced natural selection in moths was: • Predation • Pollution level • Size of trees • Number of trees • Coloration pattern on moths.

  39. The biotic variable that influenced selection in moths was: • Predation • Level of pollution • Size of trees • Number of trees • Coloration pattern on moths.

  40. Mating Behavior • Mate choice among most organisms is selective, not random. • Sexual selection may favor traits that are in conflict with natural selection. For example, bright-colored male guppies attract more females, but are also more visible to predators.

  41. Sexual selection: competition to mate Widow bird (text E1-2 pg 13)

  42. We can measure phenotype Number of males with different tail lengths in a population of red-collared widowbirds. Data based on Pryke and Andersson 2002.

  43. Selection acts directly on… • Genotype • Phenotype • Environment • Depends on if it is natural or sexual selection.

  44. Antibiotic Resistance • Antibiotic resistance has been an increasing problem since the 1970s. • How does natural selection contribute to the rise in antibiotic-resistant bacteria? (Note it is bacteria that become resistant, not people. Bacteria do not become “immune” — they do not have immune systems.)

  45. Which of these is true? • Antibiotics cause bacteria to develop immunity. • Antibiotics kill the least-resistant bacteria. • Antibiotics cause people to resist their effects. • Antibiotics create new mutations in bacteria that cause resistance.

  46. W O R K T O G E T H E R • Use the principles of natural selection to explain antibiotic resistance. Be sure to include these in your answers: • Variation in the original population. • Differential survival. • Differential reproduction • “Need,” “purpose,” and “immune” should not be in your answer!

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