chapter 16: evolution of populations. 16.1 genes and variation variation and gene pools gene pool...

34
Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations

Upload: tyler-ginger

Post on 14-Dec-2015

217 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

Chapter 16:Evolution of Populations

Page 2: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

16.1 Genes and Variation

Variation and Gene Pools

• Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms

• Allele frequency – the number of times the allele occurs in a gene pool

• In genetic terms, evolution is any change in the frequency of alleles in a population.

Page 3: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

Gene Pool for Fur Color in Mice

Page 4: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

Sources of Genetic Variation

• Mutations

• Any change in a sequence of DNA

• Gene Shuffling

• Crossing-over

• Sexual reproduction

• Random arrangement of chromosomes in Metaphase I of meiosis

Page 5: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

Single-Gene and Polygenic Traits

• Single Gene Traits – traits controlled by one gene that has two alleles

• Example: Widow’s Peak –

AA or Aa - have widow’s peak

aa - have no widow’s peak

Page 6: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency
Page 7: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

• Polygenic Traits – traits controlled by two or more genes

• Example: Height in humans

Page 8: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

Bell shaped curve is normal distribution

Page 9: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

16.2 Evolution as Genetic Change

• If an individual dies without reproducing, it does not contribute its alleles to population’s gene pool.

• If an individual produces many offspring, its alleles stay in the gene pool and may increase in frequency.

• Populations, not individual organisms, can evolve over time.

Page 10: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

• Natural selection can affect the distributions of phenotypes in three ways:

1. Directional Selection

• Phenotypes shift toward homozygous dominant or homozygous recessive

• Example: Darwin’s Finches

• The finches had beaks of different sizes to eat different food. What if the supply of small seeds disappeared only leaving the large, hard seeds? Those finches with big beaks would survive causing a shift to that phenotype

Page 11: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

Small Medium LargeBeak Size

Page 12: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

2. Stabilizing Selection

• When intermediate forms (heterozygote) of a trait are favored and alleles that specify extreme forms (homozygote) are eliminated from a population

• Example: Darwin’s Finches

• What if the supply of seeds was mostly medium size seeds?

 

Page 13: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

Beak Size

Nu

mb

er

of

Bir

ds in

Pop

ula

tion

Small Medium LargeBeak Size

Page 14: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

3. Disruptive Selection

• Forms at both extremes of the range of variation

• Extremes are favored and the intermediate form is selected against

• Example: Darwin’s Finches

• What would happen if the supply of medium seeds disappeared?

Page 15: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

Example: Darwin’s finches• What would happen if the supply of

medium seeds disappeared?

Small Medium LargeBeak Size

Page 16: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

• Genetic Drift

• Genetic Drift – a random change in allele frequencies over the generations

• Genetic drift has a greater effect on small populations.

Page 17: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

1. Founder Effect

• Occurs when allele frequencies in a group of migrating individuals are by chance not the same as that of their original population

Page 18: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

• Example: beetles

• Two small groups of different beetles leave the population.

Page 19: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

• These two small groups start their own population.

Page 20: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

Population A Population B

• The two new populations are genetically different from the original population.

Page 21: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency
Page 22: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

2. Bottleneck

• Occurs when the population undergoes a dramatic decrease in size.

• Causes:

• Natural catastrophes

• Predation

• Disease

Page 23: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

• Evolution Versus Genetic Equilibrium

• 1908 Hardy and Weinberg independently suggested a scheme whereby evolution could be viewed as changes in the frequency of alleles in a population of organisms

• Hardy-Weinberg – allele frequencies in a population will remain constant unless one or more factors cause those frequencies to change.

• Genetic Equilibrium – When allele frequencies remain constant

Page 24: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

• 5 conditions are required to maintain genetic equilibrium from generation to generation:

1. There must be random mating

2. Population must be very large

3. There can be no movement of genes into or out of the population

4. No mutations

5. No natural selection – all genotypes must have an equal rate of survival and reproduction

Page 25: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

16.3 The Process of Speciation

• Natural selection and chance events can change the relative frequencies of alleles in a population and lead to speciation.

• Speciation – formation of a new species

• Species – a group of organisms that breed with one another and produce fertile offspring.

Page 26: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

• Isolating Mechanisms

• As new species evolve, populations become reproductively isolated from each other.

• When the members of two populations cannot interbreed and produce fertile offspring, reproductive isolation has occurred.

Page 27: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

3 Types of Reproductive Isolation

1. Behavioral Isolation

• Occurs when a species does not recognize another species as a mating partner because it does not perform the correct courtship rituals, display the proper visual signals, sing the correct mating songs or release the proper chemicals

Page 28: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

2. Geographic Isolation

• Occurs when two populations are separated by geographic barriers such as rivers or mountains.

Page 29: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

3. Temporal Isolation

• Occurs when two species mate or flower during different seasons or at different times of the day

Page 30: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

17.4 Patterns of Evolution

• Macroevolution – large-scale evolutionary patterns and processes that occur over long periods of time.

• Extinction

• More than 99% of all species that have ever lived are now extinct

• What effects have mass extinctions had on the history of life? Mass extinctions have:

• Provided ecological opportunities for organisms that survived

• Resulted in bursts of evolution that produced many new species

Page 31: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

• Divergent Evolution

• Two or more species that originate from a common ancestor.

• Adaptive radiation – a type of divergent evolution – the process by which a species evolves into several different species

• The disappearance of dinosaurs then resulted in the adaptive radiation of mammals.

Page 32: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

time A time B time C time D

parent species

time

Page 33: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

• Convergent Evolution

• Convergent evolution – the process by which unrelated organisms come to resemble one another.

• Convergent evolution has resulted in sharks, dolphins, seals, and penguins.

Page 34: Chapter 16: Evolution of Populations. 16.1 Genes and Variation Variation and Gene Pools Gene pool – all genes in a population of organisms Allele frequency

• Coevolution

• Coevolution – the process by which two species evolve in response to changes in each other over time.

• Example: predator prey