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The Evolution of Populations

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Title: The Evolution of Populations


1
The Evolution of Populations
  • Chapter 23

2
Modern Synthesis
  • What difficulty did Darwin have with his
    mechanism of natural selection?
  • Genetic basis
  • Even after Mendel inheritance was between
    discrete characteristics
  • By 1940s modern synthesis combined ideas from
    different fields
  • Population is the unit of evolution
  • Natural selection is the main mechanism
  • Gradualism explained accumulation of small
    changes led to large ones over time

3
Population Genetics
  • What is a population?
  • Members of the same species living in the same
    area
  • Gene pool is the total collection of alleles in
    the population
  • What is microevolution?
  • The change in the frequency of alleles in a
    population over time

4
  • Population of wildflowers where pink allele is A
    and white allele is a
  • 500 total plants in the population, 20 are white
    and 480 are pink (320 AA and 160 Aa)
  • How many total alleles for flower color are
    there in this population of 500 flowers?
  • 1000
  • What is the frequency of A allele and a allele?
  • A 0.8 a 0.2

5
Hardy Weinberg Theorem
  • Conditions for non-evolving population
  • Very large population size
  • No migration
  • No mutations
  • Random mating
  • No natural selection
  • How would our wildflower population work
    according to these criteria?
  • A 0.8 and a 0.2

6
  • p frequency of dominant alleles
  • q frequency of recessive alleles
  • What are the three possible genotypes that result
    from random mating of these wildflowers?
  • AA, Aa and aa
  • Using the rule of multiplication we can calculate
    the frequencies of each genotype in the next
    generation (assuming no evolution)
  • Notice that p and q (allele frequencies) have
    remained the same

7
  • 2 equations are generated from the probabilities
    involved
  • p q 1
  • This means that there are only 2 possible alleles
    p and q
  • The equation that corresponds to the frequency of
    individuals regarding these two alleles
  • p2 2pq q2 1
  • p2 frequency of homozygous dominant individuals

8
  • q2 frequency of homozygous recessive
    individuals
  • 2pq frequency of heterozygous individuals
  • Round head is dominant to cone heads, 51 of the
    individuals in the population have round heads.
    What portion of this 51 are homozygous?
  • 0.49 q2 therefore q 0.7, so p 0.3
  • p2 is the frequency of homozygous dominant
    individuals 0.09 or 9

9
Causes of Microevolution
  • We can use the 5 criteria for non-evolution to
    determine causes of microevolution
  • The Hardy Weinberg equations are used to
    determine the degree of microevolution that is
    occurring for a given allele

10
Genetic Drift
  • Changes in the gene pool of a small population
    due to chance
  • Examples
  • Bottleneck
  • Founder Effect where few individuals colonize an
    isolated area
  • Is genetic drift an adaptive or non-adaptive
    mechanism?
  • Non-adaptive

11
Gene Flow
  • Negating the HW rule of no migration is the
    mechanism of gene flow
  • Migration of fertile individuals will alter the
    frequency of alleles
  • Gene flow can combine populations that were at
    one time isolated
  • Human populations have increased gene flow
    through world travel
  • Is gene flow adaptive or non-adaptive?

12
Mutations
  • Mutations can immediately alter p and q in a
    population
  • Individual mutations are rare in a population,
    but there may be cumulative mutations that have
    an effect.
  • Mutations are the original source of variation in
    a population
  • Are mutations adaptive or non-adaptive?

13
Non-random Mating
  • Inbreeding
  • Selfing is most extreme inbreeding
  • Leads to increase in homozygous individuals at
    expense of heterozygous individuals
  • When Aa individuals self only 1/2 their
    offspring are Aas, every generation sees a
    decrease in the heterozygote
  • Assortative mating - choosing individuals more
    like self
  • Adaptive or non-adaptive?

14
Natural Selection
  • Differential success among offspring leads to
    shift in frequency of alleles in the population
  • Adaptive or non-adaptive mechanism?
  • ADAPTIVE!

15
Types of Variations
  • Variations may be due to additive effects such as
    with polygenic inheritance
  • Variations of discrete traits such as
    polymorphisms where 2 or more discrete morphs can
    be seen within the population (e.g. A,B O blood
    groups)
  • Clines are types of geographical variations

16
Sources of Variations
  • Mutations
  • At first the mutation may not be beneficial to
    the organism (resistance to antibiotics)
  • Once antibiotics are introduced the mutation is
    beneficial
  • Sexual recombination increases variation

17
How are variations maintained?
  • What prevents natural selection from eliminating
    all variations?
  • Diploidy where the recessive allele is
    unfavorable and has a very low frequency in the
    population the heterozygous individual allows it
    to persist
  • Balancing selection

18
  • Neutral variations
  • fingerprints
  • variations in non-coding portions of genome
  • Can we be certain that these variations are truly
    neutral?

19
Fitness
  • Fitness is determined by reproductive success
  • Variations and natural selection affect fitness
  • Fitness is not determined by one trait but by the
    totality of traits in the organism

20
Modes of Selection
  • Stabilizing selection
  • Directional Selection
  • Diversifying Selection

21
Sexual Dimorphism
  • Males are usually more colorful and larger
  • Doesnt help cope with environment
  • Does lead to reproductive success
  • Can be termed Female Selection

22
Natural Selection Does Not Design Perfect
Organisms
  • Organisms are locked into historical constraints
  • Adaptations are often compromises as with seals
    that need to swim and walk
  • Not all evolution is adaptive
  • Selection can only select what is already there.
    Organisms cant get a trait because they need
    it.

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