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The Evolution of Populations

The Evolution of Populations. Population Genetics Causes of Microevolution Genetic Variations Natural Selection as the Mechanisms of Adaptive Evolution. Population Genetics. Synthesis of evolution and genetics Emerged as a science in the 1930’s

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The Evolution of Populations

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  1. The Evolution of Populations Population Genetics Causes of Microevolution Genetic Variations Natural Selection as the Mechanisms of Adaptive Evolution

  2. Population Genetics • Synthesis of evolution and genetics • Emerged as a science in the 1930’s • Important because it reconciled Medelian genetics with Darwinian evolution • Population is the unit of evolution (populations evolve, individuals do not)

  3. Key Terms • Population- same species, same place, same time • Species- group of populations that interbreed and produce fertile offspring • Gene pool-all of the genes in a population

  4. Hardy-Weinberg Theorem • Nonevolving population • Diploid • Large population • Isolation from other populations • No net mutations • Random mating • No natural selection

  5. Using the Hardy-Weinberg Theorem

  6. Causes of Microevolution • Small scale evolution represented by a generational shift in a population’s relative allelic frequencies • Genetic drift • Gene flow • Mutation • Nonrandom mating • Natural selection

  7. Genetic Drift • Changes in the gene pool due to chance • Bottleneck effect- population drastically reduced by natural disaster • Founder effect-when a few individuals colonize a new habitat

  8. Gene Flow • The migration of fertile individuals, or the transfer of gametes between populations

  9. Mutations • New mutation that is transmitted in gametes immediately changes the gene pool of a population by substituting one allele with another • Very little quantitative effect on large populations in a single generation

  10. Nonrandom Mating • Increases the number of homozygous loci in a population • Inbreeding- individuals usually mate with close neighbors rather than more distant members; reduction of the heterozygotes • Assortive mating-individuals mate with partners that are like themselves in certain phenotypic characters

  11. Natural Selection • Variations always exist, some variants leave more offspring that others, differential success in reproduction • Only adaptive form of microevolution

  12. Genetic Variations-the Basis of Natural Selection • Polymorphism-two or more contrasting forms (morphs) are present in noticeable frequencies • Geographical variation-differing allelic frequencies in different populations • Cline-a type of geographical variation that is a graded change in some trait along a geographical transect (example: body size of North American mammals increases with increasing latitude)

  13. Polymorphism

  14. Mutation and Sexual Recombination • Mutations-produce new alleles • Point mutations-single base in DNA • Sexual recombination-produces new combinations with “old” alleles

  15. Diploidy and Balanced Polymorphism • The diploid condition “hides” most mutations • Balanced polymorphism-counteracts the forces of natural selection (?) • Preserves variations by heterozygous advantage and frequency-dependent selection • Most variations are neutral

  16. Fitness • Relative contribution a an individual makes to the gene pool of the next generation • Relative fitness- the contribution of a genotype compared to the contributions of alternative genotypes for the same locus • Selection coefficient-relative measure of selection against an inferior genotype

  17. Patterns of Selection • Stabilizing selection- favors intermediate variants, selects against extremes, reduced phenotypic variations, stable environments • Directional selection- favors variants at one extreme, common to new habitat colonization, changing environment • Diversifying selection- opposite phenotypic extremes are favored, variable environmental conditions

  18. Modes or patterns of selection

  19. Sexual Selection • Sexual dimorphism- distinction between secondary sexual characteristics, size, color, antlers, manes • Male tends to be “showier”

  20. Sexual Selection

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