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Evolution and Natural Selection Tutorial

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Title: Evolution and Natural Selection Tutorial


1
Evolution and Natural Selection Tutorial
  • Introduction
  • Natural Selection
  • Genetic Drift
  • Quiz

2
In this tutorial, you will learn
  • How natural selection provides a mechanism for
    evolution.
  • Natural selection results from selective
    pressures in the environment and is not random.
  • There are also random processes like genetic
    drift that can upset genetic equilibrium.
  • Only natural selection results in adaptation.

Credits Figures and images by N. Wheat unless
otherwise noted. Photo of Charles Darwin from
Wikipedia. Elephant seal photo from
pdphoto.org. Funded by Title V-STEM grant
P031S090007.
3
Early Ideas About Evolution
  • Carolus Linnaeus (1700s)-Swedish Botanist
    developed a classification system for all types
    of organisms known at the time. Linnaeus
    abandoned the common belief that ALL organisms
    are fixed and did not change.
  • He proposed that some may have arisen through
    hybridization.

4
Early Ideas About Evolution
  • Georges Louis Leclerc de Buffon (1700s)-French
    Naturalist that proposed that species shared
    ancestors instead of arising separately.
  • Rejected the idea that the Earth was 6000 years
    old.

5
Early Ideas About Evolution
  • Erasmus Darwin (1731)-English Doctor and poet.
    Proposed that all living things descended from a
    common ancestor and that more-complex forms of
    life arose from less-complex forms.
  • Who do you think this guy is?

6
Early Ideas About Evolution
  • Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1809) -French naturalist
    proposed that all organisms evolved toward
    perfection and complexity.
  • Did not belief that organisms became extinct.
    Instead he reasoned that they must have evolved
    into different forms.
  • Lamarck proposed that changes in the environment
    caused an organisms behavior to change, leading
    to greater use or disuse of a structure or organ.
    The structure would become larger or smaller as a
    result. Organism would then pass these changes
    on to its offspring. Idea is known as Inheritance
    of Acquired Characteristics.

7
Early Ideas About Evolution
  • Theories of geologic change set the stage for
    Darwins theory.
  • Georges Cuvier-French zoologist did not think
    species could change, he did believe that they
    could become extinct.
  • Using the fossil record, different species that
    were found in different layers he proposed the
    following
  • Catastrophism- volcanoes, floods and
    earthquakes are events that were responsible for
    mass extinctions and the formation of all
    landforms, causing organisms to become extinct.

8
Early Ideas About Evolution
  • Theories of geologic change set the stage for
    Darwins theory.
  • James Hutton (1700s)- Scottish geologist
    proposed that the changes he observed in
    landforms resulted from slow changes over a long
    period of time, a principle known as gradualism.
  • He believed that the laying down of soil or the
    creation of canyons by rivers cutting through
    rock was a very slow process.

9
Early Ideas About Evolution
  • Theories of geologic change set the stage for
    Darwins theory.
  • Charles Lyell (1830s)- expanded on Huttons
    theory of gradualism into uniformitarianism.
  • Uniformitariansim- theory states that geologic
    processes that are still occurring today, add up
    over long periods of time and cause great change.

10
Introduction
  • Evolution includes all of the changes in the
    characteristics and diversity of life that occur
    throughout time.
  • Evolution can occur on both large and small
    scales.
  • Microevolution
  • Macroevolution

11
Introduction
  • The concept of evolution, that organisms may
    change over time, was not new in Darwins time.
  • However, it was not a widely accepted concept
    because no one understood how it could work.
  • A mechanism was missing.

12
Natural Selection
  • Darwin provided that mechanism with his theory of
    Natural Selection.

13
Natural Selection
  • In any population of organisms there is natural
    variation.
  • Some of these variations will allow the organisms
    possessing them to survive and reproduce better
    than those without these particular traits.

14
Natural Selection
  • The successful traits will spread through the
    population.
  • This change in the frequency of alleles in the
    population is evolution.

15
Natural Selection High Reproductive Potential
  • Darwin observed that organisms have the potential
    for very high fertility.
  • Organisms have the potential to produce, and
    often do produce large numbers of offspring.
  • Population size would quickly become unmanageable
    if all of the offspring survived.

16
Natural Selection Population Size Remains
Constant
  • Despite this high potential fertility, natural
    populations usually remain constant in size,
    except for small fluctuations.
  • Not all of the potential offspring survive.

17
Natural Selection Limited Resources
  • Resources that organisms need to survive are
    limited.
  • Food, water, shelter, nesting sites, etc.

18
Natural Selection Competition
  • If there are not enough resources for all of the
    individuals, there will be competition for those
    resources.
  • Survivors represent a small part of the
    individuals produced each generation.

19
Natural Selection Populations Show Variation
  • Which individuals will survive is often not a
    matter of luck.
  • Populations show variation individuals are not
    identical.
  • They differ in many different traits.

20
Natural Selection Variation is Heritable
  • Some of the variation between individuals in the
    population is heritable.
  • It can be passed down from one generation to the
    next.

21
Natural Selection Some traits Enhance Survival
  • Some of the traits found in the population
    enhance the survival and reproduction of the
    organisms possessing them.

22
Natural Selection Adaptation
  • The favored traits will spread through the
    population.
  • Over many generations, the species will become
    adapted to its environment.
  • Over time, these changes can lead to the
    formation of a new species.

23
Adaptation
  • A species may become adapted to its environment
    in response to environmental pressures.
  • A trait may be favored due to enhanced survival
    or reproduction when faced with a particular
    aspect of the environment.

24
Adaptation
  • When an environment changes, or when individuals
    move to a new environment, natural selection may
    result in adaptation to the new conditions.
  • Sometimes this results in a new species.
  • Geographical isolation

25
Populations Evolve
  • Individuals do not evolve populations evolve.
  • Evolution is measured as changes in relative
    proportions of heritable variations in a
    population over several generations.

26
Natural Selection Important Points
  • Natural selection can only work on heritable
    traits.
  • Acquired traits are not heritable and are not
    subject to natural selection.

27
Natural Selection Important Points
  • Environmental factors are variable.
  • A trait that is beneficial in one place or time
    may be detrimental in another place or time.

28
Natural Selection Important Points
  • Natural selection is not random. It occurs in
    response to environmental pressures and results
    in adaptation.

29
Natural Selection Important Points
  • When natural selection is occurring, some
    individuals are having better reproductive
    success than others.
  • Alleles are being passed to the next generation
    in frequencies that are different from the
    current generation.
  • See the Tutorial on Microevolution!

30
Upsetting Genetic Equilibrium
  • Natural selection is not the only way that allele
    frequencies can change from one generation to the
    next.
  • Genetic Drift a random loss of alleles.
  • Mutation a new mutation can add alleles.
  • Nonrandom mating inbreeding increases the
    number of homozygous traits.
  • Migration shuffles alleles between populations
    can prevent speciation.

31
Genetic Drift
  • The smaller the sample, the greater the chance of
    deviation from expected results.
  • These random deviations from expected frequencies
    are called genetic drift.
  • Allele frequencies are more likely to deviate
    from the expected in small populations.

32
Genetic Drift
  • Which allele gets lost is due to random chance.
  • Over time, drift tends to reduce genetic
    variation through random loss of alleles.

Frequency CR 0.5 Frequency CW 0.5
Frequency CR 1.0 Frequency CW 0
Frequency CR 0.7 Frequency CW 0.3
  • CRCR red
  • CRCW pink
  • CWCW white

33
The Bottleneck Effect
  • Sometimes a catastrophic event can severely
    reduce the size of a population.
  • The random assortment of survivors may have
    different allele frequencies.
  • This is a type of genetic drift called the
    bottleneck effect.

34
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35
The Bottleneck Effect
  • The actions of people sometimes cause bottlenecks
    in other species.
  • N. California elephant seal population reduced to
    20-100 individuals in the 1890s.
  • Current population gt 30,000.
  • Variation drastically reduced 24 genes with 1
    allele.

36
The Founder Effect
  • Founder effect Another type of genetic drift
    occurs when a small group of individuals becomes
    separated from the population and form a new
    population. The allele frequencies in their gene
    pool may be different than the original
    population.

37
A researcher studying the evolution of flight in
birds is focusing on
Question 1
  • Microevolution
  • Macroevolution
  • The bottleneck effect

38
Sorry!
Question 1
  • That is incorrect.
  • Try again!

39
Congratulations!
Question 1
  • You are correct!

40
What was the mechanism of evolution that Darwin
proposed?
Question 2
  • Natural Selection
  • Macroevolution
  • Genetic drift
  • Chromosomal basis of inheritance

41
Sorry!
Question 2
  • That is incorrect.
  • Try again!

42
Congratulations!
Question 2
  • You are correct!

43
In every population there is variation. It is
important that this variation
Question 3
  • Involves a variety of colors
  • Is heritable
  • Is not noticeable
  • Is acquired during an organisms lifetime

44
Sorry!
Question 3
  • That is incorrect.
  • Try again!

45
Congratulations!
Question 3
  • You are correct!

46
During natural selection, some organisms will
survive reproduce better than others. This is
due to
Question 4
  • Random chance
  • Humans choosing which animals to breed
  • Environmental pressures resulting in organisms
    with certain traits having the best reproductive
    success
  • Luck

47
Sorry!
Question 4
  • That is incorrect.
  • Try again!

48
Congratulations!
Question 4
  • You are correct!

49
Which statement about adaptation is NOT true?
Question 5
  • A species may become adapted to its environment
    in response to environmental pressures.
  • A species is perfectly adapted to its environment
    from the beginning.
  • As favored traits spread through the population,
    a species will become adapted to its environment.
  • When an environment changes, or when individuals
    move to a new environment, natural selection may
    result in adaptation to the new conditions,
    sometimes this results in a new species.

50
Sorry!
Question 5
  • That is incorrect.
  • Try again!

51
Congratulations!
Question 5
  • You are correct!

52
How can allele frequencies change from one
generation to the next?
Question 6
  • Genetic drift
  • Natural selection
  • Mutation
  • Migration
  • All of the above

53
Sorry!
Question 6
  • That is incorrect.
  • Try again!

54
Congratulations!
Question 6
  • You are correct!

55
Which of the following is NOT due to random
chance?
Question 7
  • Genetic drift
  • The bottleneck effect
  • Natural selection
  • The founder effect

56
Sorry!
Question 7
  • That is incorrect.
  • Try again!

57
Congratulations!
Question 7
  • You are correct!

58
After a catastrophe reduces the size of a
population, the survivors may have a different
set of allele frequencies. This is called
Question 8
  • The bottleneck effect
  • Natural selection
  • The founder effect
  • All of the above

59
Sorry!
Question 8
  • That is incorrect.
  • Try again!

60
Congratulations!
Question 8
  • You are correct!
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