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Chapter 23 The Evolution of Populations

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Title: Chapter 23 The Evolution of Populations


1
Chapter 23The Evolution of Populations
  • Hmwk Have your lab manual out and your data
    tables ready for the Hardy-Weinberg lab (I hope
    we get to this). I will be collecting the ch 22
    23 study guides today. Est arrival of
    evolution exam is next wed. (ch 22, 23, 24)

2
Chapter 22 Study Guide
A Darwin Themed Valentine!
3
Evidence for Evolution
  • Comparative Anatomy the comparison of body
    structures between species
  • The arms, forelegs, flippers, and wings of
    different mammals are homologous structures that
    represent variations on a structural theme that
    was present in their common ancestor

Vestigial Organs homologous structures that
have little if any current importance to the
organism
4
More Evidence..
  • Comparative Embryology- closely related organisms
    go through similar stages in their embryonic
    development.
  • Ontogeny the development of an individual
    organism is a replay of the evolutionary
    history of the species - phylogeny

5
(No Transcript)
6
Molecular Evidence
  • Molecular Homologies
  • Same genetic machinery of DNA/RNA
  • Because all organisms share the genetic code, it
    is likely that all species descended from a
    common ancestor.
  • Organisms (humans/bacteria) share many genes
    these genes have often acquired different
    functions

7
What have we learned about evolution from
molecular evidence?
  • Tree of Life
  • Homologies that evolved more recently are shared
    only within smaller branches of the tree
  • Genetic code is shared by all species because
    they date to the deep ancestral past
  • Anatomical similarities are generally reflected
    in their molecules in their genes (DNA) and
    gene products (proteins) Hemoglobin (chicken
    has 69 identical to humans)

8
The Great Beyond Nature Blog
9
Biogeography the geographic distribution of
species
  • Islands are showcases of the influence of
    geography on evolution
  • Most island species are closely related to
    species from the nearest mainland or neighboring
    island

10
The Fossil Record
  • Many transitional forms have been found
  • Birds
  • Whales

Archeopteryx
11
Darwin not the first to suggest evolution
  • He studied the evidence, made observations, and
    came up with an explanation for how evolution
    occurs natural selection.
  • How would you define natural selection?

12
What is natural selection?
  • the process by which forms of life having traits
    that better enable them to adapt to specific
    environmental pressures, will tend to survive and
    reproduce in greater numbers than others of their
    kind, thus ensuring the perpetuation of those
    favorable traits in succeeding generations.
  • only the organisms best adapted to their
    environment tend to survive and transmit their
    genetic characteristics in increasing numbers to
    succeeding generations
  • Name several environmental pressures

13
A common misconception..
  • Individual organisms evolve during their
    lifetimes misconception
  • The evolutionary impact of natural selection is
    only apparent in the changes in a population of
    organisms over time.

14
What information was Darwin missing?
  • Natural selection, requires an understanding of
    hereditary processes that Darwin could not
    explain.
  • Mendel was Darwins contemporary, but his
    discoveries went unappreciated at the time
    Darwin never saw Mendels paper on discrete
    heritable units

15
Population Genetics
  • The early 20th century brought the melding of
    Mendel and Darwins ideas founding population
    genetics the study of how populations change
    genetically over time.

16
What is a population?
  • a group of individuals belonging to the same
    species.

17
How do you know if two organisms are of the same
species?
  • a group of individuals that have the potential to
    interbreed and produce fertile offspring in
    nature.

18
Who is in your gene pool?
  • the total aggregate of genes in a population at
    one time.

19
What is wrong with this book title?
20
How do you determine allele frequency in a
population?
  • An allele frequency is the proportion of one
    allele relative to all alleles at the locus in
    the population
  • Example In a population you draw blood samples
    and do the lab work to determine the hemoglobin
    type of the 50 individuals who comprise the
    population.
  • You find
  • 20 individuals with only type HbA
  • 20 individuals with both type HbA and type HbS
  • 10 individuals with only type HbS

21
What is the allelic frequency of HbA?
  • The frequency of the A allele is equal to the sum
    of all of the A alleles divided by the total
    number of hemoglobin alleles
  • 40 A alleles (in 20 HbA/HbA individuals) 20 A
    alleles (in 20 HbA/HbS individuals) divided by
    100 total alleles
  • 60/100
  • 0.60 or 60
  • Determine the allelic frequency of HBs

22
Allele frequency
  • The frequencies of all alleles will always add up
    to 1 (or 100 of the alleles)
  • The total number of alleles (not number of forms
    of the gene) for a given population at a given
    locus will be equal to two times the population
    size
  • Except for traits on the Y chromosome, where
    population size and allele count would be the same

23
Genotype Frequency
  • A genotype frequency is the proportion of a
    population that has one genotype relative to all
    genotypes at a specific locus
  • In the previous example, we had 10 homozygous
    sicklers, genotype HbS / HbS, out of 50
    individuals for a genotype frequency of 10/50 or
    one-fifth or 0.20 or 20
  • A two allele locus will have three genotypes
    (except for Y-linked traits) and the frequencies
    of the three will add up to 1 or 100

24
Determining frequencies
  • Wildflower population A (Pink) is completely
    dominant to a (white)
  • 20 of the 500 plants are white (aa).
  • 320 (AA) and 160 (Aa)
  • What are the genotypic frequencies?
  • What are the allelic frequencies?

25
Microevolution
  • Microevolution a change in a populations gene
    frequencies from one generation to the next.
  • If we calculate the allelic and genotypic
    frequencies of a population over a span of time
    we can determine whether or not it is changing or
    evolving.

26
Hardy-Weinberg Theorem
  • The Hardy-Weinberg Theorem describes a
    mathematical relationship that allows the
    prediction of the frequency of offspring
    genotypes based on parental allele frequencies
  • It also predicts that allele frequencies will not
    change from one generation to the next, i.e., it
    is an equilibrium or non-evolutionary model as
    long as certain factors are present.

27
What factors must be present to create a
non-evolving population?
  • Very large population less chance of
    fluctuations in the gene pool
  • Isolated from other populations no new genes
    enter or old genes leave
  • No net mutations gene pool stays the same
  • Random mating no traits are preferred
  • No natural selection no traits are more
    beneficial to survival

28
Create a Population!
  • Grab a blank sheet of paper.
  • Create a fictional population of organisms
    (common name/scientific name) that you think
    meets all five requirements of the Hardy-Weinberg
    Theorem.
  • Draw the habitat, organisms write out how your
    population meets the five requirements.

29
Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium
  • The frequencies of alleles and genotypes in a
    populations gene pool remain constant over the
    generations unless acted upon by agents other
    than sexual recombination (meiosis random
    fertilization).
  • p dominant allele, q recessive allele
  • P2 2pq q2 1

30
Use the Hardy-Weinberg Equation to estimate the
percentage of the population carrying the allele
for an inherited disease
  • 1/10,000 babies in the U.S. is born with PKU (aa)
  • PKU metabolic disorder that results in mental
    retardation if discovered at birth their
    symptoms can be lessened with a
    phenylalanine-free diet
  • Assuming the 5 conditions are met What is the
    frequency of q2 (the PKU phenotype)?

31
Lab 8 Population Genetics and Evolution
  • Purpose
  • To learn about the Hardy-Weinberg law of genetic
    equilibrium, and
  • study the relationship between evolution and
    changes in allele frequency by using your class
    to represent a sample population

32
8A Estimating Allele Frequencies for a Specific
Trait within a Sample Population
  • Gene Free hanging or attached earlobes
  • Dominant allele Free hanging earlobe (AA or Aa)
  • Recessive allele attached earlobe (aa)

33
Topics for Discussion
  • What is the percentage of heterozygous free
    lobers (2pq) in your class?
  • What percentage of the Gig Harbor High School
    Population is heterozygous for the free lobe
    trait?

34
The Hardy-Weinberg Theorem
  • 1908 Hardy and Weinberg independently suggested
    a scheme whereby evolution could be viewed as
    changes in the frequency of alleles in a
    population or organisms.
  • p2 2pq q2 1.0
  • If five conditions are met, the populations
    allele and genotype frequencies will remain
    constant from generation to generation.

35
Conditions
  • The breeding population is large.
  • Mating is random.
  • There is no mutation of the alleles.
  • No differential migration occurs.
  • There is no selection.

36
The Hardy-Weinberg Equation
  • Describes an existing situation.
  • Provides a yardstick by which changes in allele
    frequency, and therefore evolution, can be
    measured.
  • One can look at a population and ask Is
    evolution occurring with respect to a particular
    gene locus?

37
8B Case Studies
  • Case I A Test of an Ideal Hardy-Weinberg
    Population
  • The entire class will represent a breeding
    population
  • To ensure random mating, choose another student
    at random
  • Gender and genotype are irrelevant to mate
    selection
  • Initial gene frequency of 0.5 for the dominant
    allele A and the recessive allele a . Genotype
    frequencies 0.25 AA, 0.50 Aa, and 0.25aa
  • Your initial genotype is Aa
  • Each person gets 4 cards (2 A and 2 a)
    representing the products of meiosis

38
Procedure
  • Turn over cards and shuffle
  • Contribute the card on top to your new offspring
    Your partner should do the same
  • One will record this genotype as the first
    offspring.
  • Shuffle again and draw the other will record
    the second offspring
  • You become your new offspring (change your cards!)

39
Questions
  • What does the Hardy-Weinberg equation predict for
    the new p and q?
  • Do the results you obtained in this simulation
    agree? If not, why?
  • What major assumptions were not strictly followed
    in this simulation?

40
Case II - Selection
  • You will modify the simulation to make it more
    realistic.
  • In nature not all genotypes have the same
    survival rate.
  • If a person inherits two recessive genes for
    sickle-cell anemia they often do not survive to
    reach reproductive maturity.
  • You will assume that the homozygous recessive
    individuals never survive.
  • Start with the same genotype and frequencies as
    last time.
  • If you get an aa you must try again until you
    get something else. Do not record your aa
    offspring.
  • Calculate your new class p and q frequencies.

41
Questions
  • How do the new frequencies of p and q compare to
    the initial frequencies in Case I?
  • What major assumptions were not strictly followed
    in this simulation?
  • Predict what would happen to the frequencies of p
    and q if you simulated another five generations.
  • In a large population would it be possible to
    completely eliminate a deleterious recessive
    allele? Explain.

42
Case III Heterozygote Advantage
  • Data from many human populations show an
    unexpectedly high frequency of the sickle-cell
    allele in some populations. This is because
    individuals who are heterozygous are slightly
    more resistant to a deadly form of malaria than
    homozygous dominant individuals. There is a
    slight selection against homozygous dominant
    individuals as compared to heterozygotes.

43
Procedure
  • Keep everything the same as in Case II except
    that if your offspring is AA, flip a coin.
  • If the coin is heads the individual does not
    survive if tails, the individual does survive.
  • Take a class survey after generation 5 then go
    to generation 10.

44
Questions
  • Explain how the changes in p and q frequencies in
    Case II compare with Case I and Case III.
  • Do you think the recessive allele will be
    completely eliminated in either Case II or Case
    III?
  • What is the importance of heterozygotes (the
    heterozygote advantage) in maintaining genetic
    variation in populations?

45
Case IV Genetic Drift
  • In each generation, some individuals may, just by
    chance, leave behind a few more descendents (and
    genes, of course!) than other individuals. The
    genes of the next generation will be the genes of
    the lucky individuals, not necessarily the
    healthier or better individuals. That, in a
    nutshell, is genetic drift. It happens to ALL
    populationstheres no avoiding the vagaries of
    chance.
  • Genetic drift affects the genetic makeup of the
    population but, unlike natural selection, through
    an entirely random process. So although genetic
    drift is a mechanism of evolution, it doesnt
    work to produce adaptations.

46
Procedure
  • Divide the class into several smaller
    populations.
  • Now go through 5 generations as you did for Case
    I.
  • Record the new genotypic frequencies and
    calculate the new frequencies of p and q fo reach
    population.

47
Questions
  • Explain how the initial genotypic frequencies of
    the populations compare.
  • What do you results indicate about the importance
    of population size as an evolutionary force?
  • Discuss Hardy-Weinberg Problems

48
What leads to genetic variation in a population?
49
Mutation
  • New genes and new alleles originate only by
    changes in the nucleotide sequence of DNA
  • Must occur in gametes to be passed on

50
Point Mutations
  • A change in one base pair
  • Usually harmless Why?
  • The genetic code is redundant
  • Much of the DNA doesnt code for protein
  • Even point mutations within a gene may not alter
    amino acid order

51
Gene duplication
  • Duplications of chromosome segments are almost
    always harmful
  • Often smaller pieces of DNA are introduced into a
    genome through the activity of transposable
    elements if it does not have a severe effect,
    it can persist over generations providing an
    expanded genome with new loci that may take on
    new functions by further mutations and selection
  • New genes may arise when the coding portions of
    genes are shuffled within the genome
  • Early mammals carried a single gene for detecting
    odors has been duplicated humans today have
    about 1,000 olfactory receptor genes, mice 1,300
  • 60 of human receptor genes have been inactivated
    by mutations mice have lost only 20

52
Mutation Rates
  • plants and animals (1/100,000 genes per
    generation)
  • Microorganisms and viruses with short generation
    spans mutations can rapidly generate genetic
    variation
  • HIV generation span of about 2 days RNA
    genome (more mutations)
  • Single-drug treatments will probably never be
    effective
  • Even double-drug treatments rarely work for long
    viruses with double mutations conferring
    resistance to both drugs arise daily
  • The most effective AIDS treatments at this time
    are drug cocktails combining several medications

53
Sexual Recombination
  • Far more important than mutation
  • Nearly all variations result from recombination
    shuffling of the existing alleles in the gene
    pool during meiosis

54
Natural Selection
  • Can alter a populations genetic composition
  • Individuals in a population exhibit variations in
    their heritable traits, and those with variations
    that are better suited to their environment tend
    to produce more offspring that those with
    variations that are less well suited.

55
Genetic Drift
  • The smaller the population, the greater the
    change of deviation from the predicted result
  • gene frequencies can fluctuate unpredictably from
    one generation to the next these fluctuations
    are called genetic drift

56
  • Two situations that can increase the impact of
    genetic drift on a population
  • The Bottleneck Effect
  • Flood, fire, hunting may drastically reduce the
    size of a population the survivors have passed
    through a restrictive bottleneck, and their
    gene pool may no longer be reflective or the
    original populations gene pool
  • The Founder Effect
  • Isolation of a few individuals from a larger
    population they may establish a new populations
    whose gene pool is not reflective of the source
    population colonizing an island

57
Gene Flow
  • Genetic additions to and/or subtractions from a
    population resulting from the movement of
    fertile individuals or gametes
  • Humans today move much more freely gene flow
    has become an important agent of change in human
    populations that were previously quite isolated.

58
Natural Selection
  • The primary mechanism of adaptive evolution
  • Discrete characters (either/or)
  • Quantitative characters (vary along a continuum)
  • Polymorphism (when individuals differ in form)

59
Relative Fitness
  • An organisms fitness the contribution an
    individual makes to the gene pool of the next
    generation, relative to the contributions of
    other individuals
  • Population geneticists define relative fitness as
    the contribution of a genotype to the next
    generation compared to the contributions of
    alternative genotypes for the same locus
  • If pink white flowers produce equal numbers of
    offspring and red flowers produce 80 as
    many.The top reproducers are given a 1, red
    would be .8 relative fitness

60
Natural Selection can alter the frequency
distribution of traits in three ways
  • Directional selection
  • Favors variants of one
  • extreme both dark and light colored
  • mice move into an environ with only
  • dark rocks.
  • Disruptive selection
  • Favors variants at both ends
  • for instance different colored
  • mice in a patchy environ.
  • Stabilizing selection
  • Removes extreme variants mice
  • of a light and dark color living in an
  • environment of rocks of intermediate color

61
Why doesnt natural selection reduce variation?
Get rid of unfavorable genotypes?
  • Diploidy a considerable amount of genetic
    variation is hidden from selection in the form of
    recessive alleles.
  • Recessive alleles that are less favorable than
    their dominant counterparts can persist because
    they are propagated in heterozygous individuals.
  • The rarer the allele, the greater the protection
    from natural selection.

62
  • Balancing Selection natural selection maintains
    stable frequencies of two or more phenotypic
    forms in a population a state called balanced
    polymorphism. This selection includes
    heterozygote advantage and frequency-dependent
    selection.
  • Heterozygote Advantage malaria/sickle-cell
    anemia
  • Frequency-Dependent Selection the fitness of
    any one morph declines if it becomes too common
    in the population. Examples predator/prey
    interactions.

63
  • Neutral Variation some genetic variation has no
    impact on reproductive success much of the
    human genome has no known use or impact
  • Sexual Selection natural selection for mating
    success leads to marked differences between the
    sexes in secondary sexual characterizes
  • Intrasexual selection selection within the
    same sex direct competition among individuals
    of one sex for mates of the opposite sex
  • Intersexual selection mate choice (usually
    females) are are choosy in their mate selection
    some researchers are testing the hypothesis that
    these sexual advertisements (showy plumage)
    reflect overall health because they do pose a
    risk for attracting predators.

64
Why sexual reproduction?
  • As a method of rapid population expansion, it is
    far inferior to asexual reproduction.
  • The processes of meiotic recombination and
    fertilization generate genetic variation
  • Genetic variation is important in resistance to
    disease.

65
Why Natural Selection Cannot Fashion Perfect
Organisms
  • Evolution is limited by historical constraints.
  • Birds have two legs and two wings. Wouldnt it
    be handy for some birds to have four legs for
    running and two wings for flight?
  • Adaptations are often compromises
  • We humans owe much of our versatility and
    athleticism to our prehensile hands and flexible
    limbs, which also make us prone to sprains, torn
    ligaments, and dislocations. Structural
    reinforcement has been compromised for agility.

66
  • Chance and natural selection interact.
  • When a storm blows insects or birds hundreds of
    miles over an ocean to an island, the wind does
    not necessarily transport the species, that are
    best suited to the new environment.
  • Selection can edit only existing variations
  • Natural selection favors only the fittest
    phenotypes among those currently in the
    population, which may not be the ideal traits.
    New alleles do not arise on demand.

67
Practice Write
  • 1989 Do the following with reference to the
    Hardy-Weinberg model.
  • Indicate the conditions under which allele
    frequencies (p and Q) remain constant from one
    generation to the next.
  • b. Calculate, showing all work, the frequencies
    of the alleles and frequencies of the genotypes
    in a population of 100,000 rabbits of which
    25,000 are white and 75,000 are agouti. (In
    rabbits the white color is due to a recessive
    allele, w, and agouti is due to a dominant
    allele, W.)
  • c. If the homozygous dominant condition were to
    become lethal, what would happen to the allelic
    and genotypic frequencies in the rabbit
    population after two generations?

68
Practice Write
  • Discuss how each of the following contributes
    evidence that evolution has occurred
  • a. Paleontology
  • b. Geographical distribution
  • c. Biochemical studies

69
Paleontology
  • The succession of forms observed in the fossil
    record is consistent with the major branches of
    descent in the tree of life.
  • The oldest known fossils are prokaryotes
  • Stromatolites thrived in warm aquatic
    environments and built reefs much the same way as
    coral does today.
  • Paleontologists have discovered fossils of many
    transitional forms that link ancient organisms to
    modern species
  • fossil evidence that birds descended from one
    branch of dinosaurs
  • have found fossilized whales linking these
    aquatic mammals to their terrestrial ancestors

70
Geographical DistributionBiogeography
  • Closely related species tend to be found in the
    same geographic region
  • Australia the marsupials distinct from other
    mammals
  • Two organisms may adapt to similar environments
    in similar ways though they evolved from
    different ancestors
  • Sugar gliders (marsupials) are similar to flying
    squirrels (placental)
  • Islands are showcases of biogeography
  • Contain endemic plants and animals
  • Most island species are closely related to
    species form the nearest mainland or neighboring
    island
  • Two islands with similar environments in
    different parts of the world are populated not by
    closely related species but by species that
    resemble those of the nearest mainland where
    the environment is often quite different
  • The finches of the Galapagos (island chains)
    see speciation from island to island

71
Biochemical Studies
  • DNA if the species are closely related, the
    sequences likely differ at only one or a few
    sites.
  • In contrast, comparable nucleic acid sequences in
    distantly related species usually have different
    bases at many sites and may even have different
    lengths
  • Over long periods of time insertions and
    deletions accumulate
  • Amino Acid Sequences (Proteins)
  • mtDNA sequences in humans

72
Ch 24 The Origin of Species
  • Speciation is the appearance of new species
    the source of biological diversity
  • Its not enough to explain how adaptations evolve
    in a population microevolution
  • Evolutionary theory must also explain how new
    species originate and develop
  • Macroevolution Evolutionary change above the
    species level the cumulative effect of
    speciation over vast tracts of time the
    appearance of feathers during the evolution of
    birds from one group of dinosaurs

73
Two Patterns of Evolutionary Change
  • Anagenesis the accumulation of changes that
    gradually transform a given species into a
    species with different characteristics.
  • Cladogenesis the splitting of a gene pool into
    two or more separate pools, which each give rise
    to one or more new species only cladogenesis
    can promote biological diversity by increasing
    the number of species

74
How to define the term species
  • The biological species concept a population or
    group of populations whose members have the
    potential to interbreed in nature and produce
    viable, fertile offspring, but are unable to
    produce viable, fertile offspring with members of
    other populations.

75
Reproductive Isolation
  • The biological species concept hinges on
    reproductive isolation biological factors
    (barriers) that impeded members of two species
    from producing viable, fertile hybrids

76
Prezygotic barriers p.474
  • Habitat Isolation
  • Temporal Isolation
  • Behavioral Isolation
  • Mechanical Isolation
  • Gametic Isolation

77
Postzygotic Barriers
  • Reduced Hybrid Viability the genes of different
    parent species may interact and impair the
    hybrids development
  • Reduced Hybrid Fertility offspring may be
    vigorous but sterile meiosis may be affected
    by the number of chromosomes
  • Hybrid Breakdown some first-generation hybrids
    are viable and fertile, but when they mate with
    one another or with either parent species,
    offspring of the next generation are feeble or
    sterile

78
Take notes on the rest of chapter 24 noting all
bold faced terms
79
Possible Essay Questions
  • Describe the modern theory of evolution and
    discuss how it is supported by evidence from two
    of the following three areas a. Population
    genetics b. Molecular biology c. Comparative
    anatomy and embryology
  • Define, discuss, and give an example of how each
    of the following isolating mechanisms contributes
    to speciation in organisms. a. Geographical
    barriers b. Ecological (including seasonal)
    isolation c. Behavioral isolation d. Polyploidy
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