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WEEK 1: CHAPTER 13 HOW POPULATIONS EVOLVE

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Title: WEEK 1: CHAPTER 13 HOW POPULATIONS EVOLVE


1
  • WEEK 1 CHAPTER 13 - HOW POPULATIONS EVOLVE
  • CHARLES DARWIN AND HIS THEORY OF
    EVOLUTIONNATURAL SELECTION    SPECIES PRODUCE
    EXCESSIVE NUMBER OF OFFSPRING    LIMITED NUMBER
    OF RESOURCES    COMPETITION FOR RESOURCES   
    ONLY THE MOST FIT SURVIVESURVIVAL OF THE
    FITTESTDESCENT WITH MODIFICATIONS
  •  

2
  • LAMARCKINHERITANCE OF ACQUIRED CHARACTERISTICS
  • FOSSILSSTUDY OF FOSSILS USED TO EXPLAIN AND
    DOCUMENT EVOLUTION
  • OTHER EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTIONBIOGEOGRAPHYCOMPARAT
    IVE ANATOMYMOLECULAR BIOLOGYLOOK AT THIS SITE
    WWW.NCBI.NLM.NIH TO FIND DNA AND
    PROTEIN SEQUENCES FOR VARIOUS ORGANISMS

3
  • POPULATION GENETICSPOPULATIONSSPECIESGENE
    POOLDOMINANT AND RECESSIVE GENESHOMOZYGOUS AND
    RECESSIVEYOU MAY NEED TO REVIEW SOME TERMS YOU
    LEARNED IN BIOL1111LOOK AT THE SECTION ON
    MENDELIAN GENETICS
  • OTHER TERMS  GENE FLOW, GENETIC DRIFT, THE
    FOUNDER EFFECTGENOTYPE FREQUENCYALLELE
    FREQUENCYHARDY-WEINBERGp q 1p2 2pq q2
    1

4
  • CALCULATIONS - YOU WILL HAVE SOME HOMEWORK AND
    OR/QUIZ WHERE YOU WILL NEED TO FIGURE OUT SOME
    PROBLEMS RELATED TO THE GENOTYPE AND ALLELE
    FREQUENCY
  • GENETIC VARIATION DUE TO MUTATIONSDUPLICATIONSIN
    VERSIONSDELETIONS
  • GENETIC VARIATION DUE TO SEXUAL
    RECOMBINATIONDIPLOIDY AND BALANCING SELECTION
    PRESERVE VARIATION
  • REPRODUCTIVE FITNESS
  • NATURAL SELECTION ALTERS VARIATIONSTABILIZING
    SELECTIONDIRECTIONAL SELECTIONDISRUPTIVE
    SELECTION

5
  • HOW POPULATIONS EVOLVE
  • CHARLES DARWIN DISCUSSED THE THEORIES OF
  • NATURAL SELECTION AND SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST
  • SOME ANIMALS HAVE FEATURES THAT HELP THEM
  • SURVIVE IN THEIR ENVIRONMENTS
  • EVOLUTIONARY ADAPATATIONS
  • EXAMPLE IN BOOK BIRD CALLED A BOOBY
  • LARGE WEBBED FIT CAN WALK FAST
  • BODY SHAPE
  • LARGE TAIL
  • SPECIALIZED GLANDS HELP ANIMALS STAY AFLOAT AND
    MANAGE SALT ITAKE
  • ALL THESE FEATURES EVOLUTIONARY ADAPTATIONS
    THEY HELP THE ANIMAL SURVIVE AND REPRODUCE
  • TODAY WE WILL DISCUSS THE PROCESS BY WHICH
    ANIMALS DEVELOP EVOLUTIONARY ADAPTATIONS

6
  • DARWIN LIVING SPECIES HAVE ARISEN FROM EARLIER
    LIFE FORMS
  • SPECIES CHANGE OVER TIME
  • PRIOR SCIENTISTS BELIEVED THAT SPECIES ARE FIXED,
    UNCHANGING AND PERMANENT
  • LAMARCK DIFFERENT FROM DARWIN
  • -AN INDIVIDUAL DEVELOPS CERTAIN TRAITS THAT IT
    PASSES ON TO ITS OFFSPRING
  • - INHERITANCE OF ACQUIRED CHARACTERISTICS
  • -ANCESTORS OF GIRAFFES HAD LENGTHENED THEIR
    NECKS BY STRETCHING HIGHER AND HIGHER INTO
    LEAVES TO REACH LEAVES
  • -SPECIES EVLOLVE AS A RESULT OF INTERACTING WITH
    THEIR ENVIRONMENT

7
  • DARWIN WENT ON A ROUND-THE-WORLD SEA VOYAGE
  • THE EARTH WAS CONSTANTLY CHANGING
  • PUBLISHED A BOOK ENTITLED ON THE ORIGIN OF THE
    SPECIES BY MEANS OF NATURAL SELECTION
  • DISCUSSES HIS THEORY OF NATURAL SELECTION AND HOW
    EVOLUTION OCCURS
  • DESCENT WITH MODIFICATIONS
  • -AN ANCESTRAL SPECIES COULD DIVERSIFY INTO MANY
    DESCENDANT SPECIES BY THE ACCUMULATION OF
    ADAPTATIONS TO VARIOUS ENVIRONMENTS

8
  • DARWIN - ALL SPECIES TEND TO PRODUCE EXCESS
    NUMBER OF OFFSPRING
  • POPULATIONS GROW FASTER THAN THE SUPPLY OF FOOD
    AND OTHER RESOURCES CAN KEEP UP
  • COMPETITION FOR RESOURCES
  • ONLY SOME OFFSPRING SURVIVE IN EACH GENERATION
  • INDIVIDUALS IN A POPULATION VARY IN MANY TRAITS
  • THESE TRAITS ARE INHERITED PASSED FROM ONE
    GENERATION TO THE NEXT

9
  • EVERY ENVIRONMENT HAS A LIMITED SUPPLY OF
    RESOURCES
  • SURVIVAL DEPENDS ON THE SPECIFIC TRAITS THAT WERE
    INHERITED FROM THEIR PARENTS
  • INDIVIDUALS WHOSE CHARACTERISTICS ADAPT THEM BEST
    TO THEIR ENVIRONMENTS ARE MOST LIKELY TO SURVIVE
    AND REPRODUCE
  • THESE INDIVIDUALS LEAVE MORE OFFSPRING
  • NATURAL SELECTION CAN MODIFY SPECIFIES
    CONSIDERABLE OVER THOUSANDS OF GENERATIONS

10
DIVERSITY OF DIFFERENT BREEDS OF DOGS A SINGLE
SPECIES
11
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12
  • FOSSILS
  • IMPRINTS OR REMAINS OF ORGANISMS THAT LIVED IN
    THE PAST
  • SCIENTISTS OBSERVED SIMILARITIES BETWEEN FOSSILS
    AND LIVING ORGANISMS
  • FOSSILS DOCUMENT THE CHANGES THAT
  • LIFE HAS UNDERGONE OVER TIME
  • LIFE EVOLVES
  • PALEONTOLOGIST SCIENTISTS WHO STUDY FOSSILS

13
  • THE FOSSIL RECORD THE ORDERED ARRAY IN WHICH
    FOSSILS APPEAR WITHINS LAYERS OF SEDIMENTARY ROCK
    EVIDENCE OF EVOLUTION
  • ROCK FORMS IN STRATA OR LAYERS
  • YOUNGER STRATA ARE ON TOP OF OLDER ONES
  • THE AGE OF THE FOSSILS CAN BE DETERMINED BY THE
    LAYERS

14
  • DIFFERENT ORGANISMS APPEARED AT DIFFERENT TIMES
  • OLDEST FOSSILS FROM 3.5 BILLION YEARS AGO
  • PROKARYOTES ANCESTORS OF ALL LIFE
  • THEN, EUKARYOTES
  • AMPHIBIANS
  • REPTILES
  • MAMMALS
  • BIRDS
  • WE FIND SIGNS IN THE FOSSIL RECORD OF LINKAGE
    BETWEEN ANCIENT EXTINCT ORGANISMS AND SPECIES
    LIVING TODAY

15
EXAMPLES OF FOSSILSSKULL FROM ONE OF OUR EARLY
RELATIVES WHO LIVED 1.5 MILLION YEARS AGO

16
  • BOY STANDING IN
  • A 150 MILLION YEAR AGO DINOSAUR TRACK

17
  • EVIDENCE THAT REINFORCES THE FOSSIL RECORD OF
    EVOLUTION
  • BIOGEOGRAPHY GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF SPECIES
  • SPECIES IN ONE AREA MAY RESEMBLE SPECIES IN A
    DIFFERENT GEOGRAPHICAL AREA EVOLUTION
  • COMPARATIVE ANATOMY COMPARISON OF BODY
    STRUCTURES IN DIFFERENT SPECIES
  • HOMOLOGY SIMILARITY IN CHARACTERISTICS THAT
    RESULT FROM COMMON ANCESTORY
  • HOMOLOGOUS STRUCTURES FEATURES THAT OFTEN HAVE
    DIFFERENT FUNCTIONS BUT ARE STRUCTURALLY SIMILAR
    BECAUSE OF COMMON ANCESTORY
  • EVOLUTION ANCESTRAL STRUCTURES THAT ORIGINALLY
    FUNCTIONED IN ONE CAPACITY BECAME MODIFIED AS
    THEY TAKE ON NEW FUNCTIONS

18
EXAMPLES OF HOMOLOGOUS STRUCTURESVERTEBRATE
FORELIMBS
19
  • ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF HOMOLOGOUS STRUCTURES
  • VESTIGIAL ORGANS DO NOT HAVE ANY IMPORTANT
    FUNCTION TODAY
  • REMNANTS OF STRUCUTRES THAT SERVED IMPORTANT
    FUNCTIONS IN THE ORGANISMS ANCESTORS
  • THE ORGANISM CAN LIVE WITHOUT IT TODAY
  • WHAT ARE SOME IMPORTANT VESTIGIAL ORGANS IN
    HUMANS?

20
  • APPENDIX
  • GALL BLADDER
  • THESE STRUCTURES CAN BE REMOVED AND THE PERSON
    CAN LIVE A NORMAL LIFE

21
  • COMPARATIVE EMBRYOLOGY
  • COMPARISON OF EARLIER STAGES OF DEVELOPMENT
  • MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
  • COMPARE DNA SEQUENCES BETWEEN DIFFERENT ORGANISMS
  • HEREDITY COMES FROM THE DNA
  • IF TWO SPECIES HAVE DNA WITH SEQUENCES THAT MATCH
    CLOSELY, BIOLOGISTS CONCLUDE THAT THESE SEQUENCES
    MUST HAVE BEEN INHERITED FROM A COMMON ANCESTOR
  • THE GREATER THE SEQUENCE DIFFERENCE, THE LESS
    LIKELY THAT THERE IS A COMMON ANCESTOR

22
  • DNA ENCODES FOR PROTEINS
  • WE CAN ALSO COMPARE SIMILARITIES IN PROTEIN
    SEQUENCES

23
  • WWW.NCBI.NLM.NIH.GOV
  • LOOK AT NUCLEOTIDES FOR DNA SEQUENCES OF
    DIFFERENT ORGANISMS
  • LOOK AT PROTEINS FOR THE PROTEIN STRUCTURES OF
    DIFFERENT ORGANISMS
  • LOOK AT TAXONOMY TO FIND INFORMATION ON DIFFERENT
    ORGANISMS

24
  • EXAMPLES OF NATURAL SELECTION
  • USE OF PESTICIDES SELECT FOR PESTICIDE
    RESISTANT INSECTS
  • INITIALLY, A LARGE NUMBER OF INSECTS KILLED WITH
    PESTICIDES, A SMALL PERCENT OF INSECTS THAT ARE
    PESTICIDE RESISTANT SURVIVE
  • IF YOU SPRAY AGAIN, THERE ARE NOW MORE PESTICIDE
    RESISTANT INSECTS, SO THAT THE NUMBER THAT WILL
    SURVIVE WILL BE GREATER

25
EXAMPLE OF NATURAL SELECTION IN ACTION
26
  • NATURAL SELECTION IS A EDITING RATHER THAN A
    CREATIVE MECHANISM
  • IT SELECTS FOR RESISTANT INSECTS IT DOES NOT
    CREATE THEM
  • IT DEPENDS ON TIME AND PLACE THE ENVIRONMENT
  • SIGNIFICANT EVOLUTIONARY CHANGE CAN OCCUR OVER A
    SHORT PERIOD OF TIME

27
MICROEVOLUTION
  • THE PROCESS WHEREBY CHANGES IN THE ALLELE
    FREQUENCIES ARE BROUGHT ABOUT BY GENETIC DRIFT,
    GENETIC FLOW, MUTATION AND NATURAL SELECTION

28
  • POPULATIONS ARE THE UNITS OF EVOLUTION
  • POPULATION A GROUP OF INDIVIDUALS OF THE SAME
    SPECIES LIVING IN THE SAME PLACE AT THE SAME TIME
  • SPECIES A GROUP OF ORGANISMS THAT CAN BREED
    WITH EACH OTHER AND PRODUCE FERTILE OFFSPRING
  • IT IS POPULATIONS THAT EVOLVE
  • POPULATIONS CHANGE OVER GENERATIONS
  • POPULATION GENETICS STUDY HOW POPULATIONS
    CHANGE GENETICALLY OVER TIME DARWIN AND MENDEL

29
  • GENE POOL ALL OF THE GENES IN A POPULATION AT A
    GIVEN TIME
  • THE GENE POOL REMAINS CONSTANT OVER THE
    GENERATIONS UNLESS ACTED UPON BY OUTSIDE AGENTS
    HARDY-WEINBERG PRINCIPLE
  • DOMINANT GENE W
  • RECESSIVE GENE w
  • THESE ARE DIFFERENT EXAMPLES OF ALLELES
  • THE DIFFERENT FORMS OF THE GENE
  • GENOTYPES WW, Ww AND ww

30
  • ALSO REMEMBER
  • HOMOZYGOUS DOMINANT WW
  • HOMOZYGOUS RECESSIVE ww
  • HETEROZYGOUS Ww

31
  • GENOTYPE FREQUENCY
  • THE NUMBER OF ANIMALS WITH A PARTICULAR GENOTYPE
    (2 ALLELES)/THE TOTAL NUMBER OF ANIMALS
  • ALLELE FREQUENCY
  • THE NUMBER OF ANIMALS WITH ONE SPECIFIC
    ALLELE/TOTAL NUMBER OF ANIMALS

32
HOW DO WE CALCULATE GENOTYPE AND ALLELE
FREQUENCIES?
  • THE FREQUENCY OF W FREQUENCY OF W IN WW AND IN
    Ww ANIMALS
  • THE FREQUENCY OF w FREQUENCY OF w IN Ww AND IN
    ww ANIMALS

33
  • p q 1
  • p THE FREQUENCY OF THE DOMINANT ALLELE
  • q THE FREQUENCY OF THE RECESSIVE ALLELE
  • p2 2pq q2 1
  • p2 THE FREQUENCY OF HOMOZYGOUS DOMINANT ANIMALS
    WW
  • 2pq THE FREQUENCY OF HETEROZYGOUS ANIMALS
  • q2 THE FREQUENCY OF HOMOZYGOUS RECESSIVE
    ANIMALS

34
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35
  • FROM GENERATION TO GENERATION, THE GENE POOL
    REMAINS CONSTANT HARDY-WEINBERG EQUILIBRIUM
  • THE POPULATION IS VERY LARGE
  • THERE IS NO GENE FLOW NO MOVEMENT IN OR OUT OF
    THE POPULATION
  • MUTATIONS DO NOT ALTER THE GENE POOL
  • MATING IS RANDOM
  • ALL INDIVIDUALS ARE EQUAL IN REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS
  • THESE CONDITIONS ARE NOT USUALLY MET

36
  • EVOLUTION IS CAUSED BY
  • NATURAL SELECTION
  • GENE FLOW THE MOVEMENT OF NEW ALLELES INTO A
    POPULATION DUE TO INDIVIDUALS ENTERING OR LEAVING
    A POPULATION
  • GENETIC DRIFT
  • CHANGE IN THE GENE POOL DUE TO CHANCE
  • IF THE POULATION IS SMALL, THE GENE FREQUENCIES
    MAY NOT ADEQUATELY REPRESENT WHAT WILL BE SEEN IN
    THE NEXT GENERATION
  • CAN CAUSE REDUCED GENETIC VARIATION

37
  • GENETIC DRIFT CAN OCCUR DUE TO THE BOTTLENECK
    EFFECT ANY EVENT THAT DRAMATICALLY REDUCES
    POULATION SIZE
  • EARTHQUAKES, FLOODS, FIRE
  • ONLY A SMALL NUMBER OF INDIVIDUALS MAY SURVIVE
  • GENETIC DRIFT CAN OCCUR DUE TO THE FOUNDER EFFECT
  • A SMALL NUMBER OF INDIVIDUALS MAY LEAVE THE
    POPULATION AND MOVE TO A NEW LOCATION
  • THE GENE FREQUENCY WILL BE DIFFERENT FROM THE
    LARGER POPULATION

38
  • ARE THERE GROUPS OF PEOPLE IN THE WORLD WHERE
    ONLY SMALL NUMBERS OF PEOPLE BREED WITH EACH
    OTHER?

39
CERTAIN ETHNIC GROUPS TEND TO MARRY AND BREED
WITHIN THEIR OWN GROUP THIS DECREASES THE
GENETIC VARIABILITY THERE ARE ONLY A SMALL
NUMBER OF GENES THERE MAY BE AN INCREASED
INCIDENCE OF CERTAIN DISEASES
40
  • MUTATION IS THE ULTIMATE SOURCE OF RAW MATERIAL
    FOR EVOLUTION
  • CHANGES IN THE SEQUENCE OF DNA CAN CREATE NEW
    ALLELES
  • ONLY MUTATIONS IN CELLS THAT PRODUCE GAMETES CAN
    BE PASSED TO OFFSPRING AND POTENTIALLY AFFECT A
    POPULATIONS GENE POOL
  • THERE ARE DIFFERENT TYPES OF MUTATIONS
  • DUPLICATIONS
  • INVERSIONS
  • DELETING DNA
  • GENE SEQUENCE IS ALTERED

41
DUPLICATION
42
INVERSIONA LINEAR STRETCH OF DNA ISREVERSED
43
  • DELETIONS
  • LOSS OF A PIECE OF DNA
  • MOST ARE LETHAL OR CAUSE SERIOUS
  • PROBLEMS

44
SHUFFLING ALLELES BY SEXUAL RECOMBINATION ALSO
CREATES GENETIC VARIATION
45
  • DIPLOIDY AND BALALANCING SELECTION PRESERVE
    VARIATION
  • MOST EUKARYOTES ARE DIPLOID THERE ARE TWO COPIES
    FOR EACH GENE ONE FROM THE FATHER AND ONE FROM
    THE MOTHER
  • BEING DIPLOID HELPS PREVENT POPULATIONS FROM
    BECOMING GENETICALLY UNIFORM

46
  • BALANCING SELECTION OCCURS WHEN NATURAL SELECTION
    MAINTAINS STABLE FREQUENCIES OF TWO OR MORE
    PHENOTYPE FORMS IN A POPULATION
  • MAY BE THE RESULT OF HETEROZYGOTE ADVANTAGE
  • THOSE INDIVIDUALS WITH TWO ALLELES HAVE AN
    ADVANTAGE OVER THOSE WITH ONLY ONE ALLELE
  • THE TWO ALLELES WILL THEN BE MAINTAINED
  • EXAMPLE PROTECTION FROM MALARIA BY HAVING THE
    ALLELE FOR SICKLE CELL ANEMIA

47
SOME GENETIC VARIATIONS HAVE NO IMPACT ON
REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS
  • EXAMPLE HUMAN FINGERPRINTS
  • NEUTRAL VARIATION GENETIC VARIATION THAT
    PROVIDES NO APPARENT SELECTIVE ADVANTAGE

48
  • FITNESS CONTRIBUTION THAT AN INDIVIDUAL MAKES
    TO THE GENE POOL OF THE NEXT GENERATION RELATIVE
    TO THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF OTHER INDIVIDUALS
  • THE FITTEST INDIVIDUALS ARE THOSE THAT PRODUCE
    THE LARGEST NUMBER OF VIABLE, FERTILE OFFSPRING
    AND PASS ON THE MOST GENES TO THE NEXT GENERATION

49
  • NATURAL SELECTION ALTERS VARIATION BY
  • STABILIZING SELECTION FAVORS INTERMEDIATE
    VARIANTS
  • DIRECTIONAL SELECTION ACTS AGAINST INDIVIDUALS
    AT ONE OF THE PHENOTYPIC EXTREMES
  • DISRUPTIVE SELECTION FAVORS INDIVIDUALS AT BOTH
    EXTREMES OF A PHENOTYPIC RANGE

50
NATURAL SELECTION CAN ALTER VARIATION IN A
POPULATION IN THREE WAYS
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