mechanisms for genetic variation. population a localized group of individuals of the same species

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Mechanisms for Genetic Variation

Population A localized group of individuals of the

same species.

Species

A group of similar organisms. A group of populations that could

interbreed and produce fertile offspring.

Microevolution

Caused by violations of the five H-W assumptions.

Causes of Microevolution

1. Genetic Drift

2. Gene Flow

3. Mutations

4. Nonrandom Mating

5. Natural Selection

1. Genetic Drift Changes in the gene pool of a small

population by chance. Change can be drastic (especially in

small populations) Types:

1. Bottleneck Effect 2. Founder's Effect

By Chance

Bottleneck Effect

Loss of most of the population by disasters.

Surviving population may have a different gene pool than the original population.

Result

Some alleles lost. Other alleles are over-represented. Genetic variation usually lost.

Importance

Reduction of population size may reduce gene pool for evolution to work with.

Ex: Northern elephant seals - over hunting reduced numbers to 20.

Founder's Effect

Genetic drift in a new colony that separates from a parent population.

Probably accounts for the relatively high frequency of certain inherited disorders among isolated human populations

Result Genetic variation reduced. Some alleles increase in frequency while

others are lost (as compared to the parent population).

Very common on islands Ex. High occurrence of a progressive form of

blindness (recessive disorder) on an island populated by 15 colonists

2. Gene Flow

Movement of genes in/out of a population. Ex:

Immigration Emigration

Result

Changes in gene frequencies. Tends to reduce differences between

populations.

3. Mutations

Inherited changes in a gene.

Result

May change gene frequencies (small population).

Source of new alleles for selection. Often lost by genetic drift.

4. Nonrandom Mating

Failure to choose mates at random from the population.

Causes

Inbreeding within the same “neighborhood”.

Assortative mating (like with like). Choose partners that have a similar

phenotype (ex. size) Basis for artificial selection (animals breed for

specific characteristics)

Result

Increases the number of homozygous loci.

Does not in itself alter the overall gene frequencies in the population.

5. Natural Selection

Differential success in survival and reproduction.

Result - Shifts in gene frequencies. Selective pressures (predation,

competition, etc.) work on populations, and consequently some individuals are more likely to survive and reproduce than others

As the Environment changes, so does Natural Selection and Gene Frequencies.

Of all the factors that can change a gene pool, only natural selection is likely to adapt a population to its environment.

Natural selection accumulates and maintains favourable genotypes in a population

Depends on the existence of genetic variation

Examples

Garter Snakes Gaillardia

Sources of Genetic Variation

Mutations. Recombination though sexual

reproduction. Crossing-over Random fertilization

Rate of Selection

Differs between dominant and recessive alleles.

Selection pressure by the environment.

Modes of Natural Selection

1. Stabilizing

2. Directional

3. Diversifying

4. Sexual

Stabilizing

Selection toward the average and against the extremes.

Ex: birth weight in humans

Directional Selection

Selection toward one extreme. Common during times of change Ex: running speeds in race animals. Ex. modern horse

Diversifying

Selection toward both extremes and against the norm.

Can lead to intermediate being eliminated from the population

Ex: bill size in birds

Sexual Mate selection

Differential reproductive success that results from variation in the ability to obtain mates

May not be adaptive to the environment, but increases reproduction success of the individual.

Result Sexual dimorphism (differences in form

between members of the opposite sex) Secondary sexual features for attracting

mates.

Comments

Females may drive sexual selection and dimorphism since they often "choose" the mate.

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