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Chapter 18: Evolutionary Change in Populations

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Title: Chapter 18: Evolutionary Change in Populations


1
Chapter 18 Evolutionary Change in Populations
2
Remember
  • Basis of evolution is GENETIC
  • We study POPULATIONS (not in an individual
    lifetime)
  • Variations are due to
  • ENVIRONMENT
  • HEREDITY

3
Populations genetics
  • Study of genetic variability within a population
    and of the forces that act on it

4
5 factors responsible for evolutionary change
  • Nonrandom mating
  • Mutation
  • Genetic drift
  • Gene flow
  • Natural selection

5
Gene pool
  • All the alleles for all genes present in the
    population
  • Genotype frequency
  • Phenotype frequency
  • Allele frequency

6
Hardy-Weinberg
  • Genetic equilibrium allele and genotypes
    frequencies do not change between generations
  • Ideal situation rare
  • Provides model
  • Equation

7
(No Transcript)
8
  • The occurrence of PKU is 1 per 10,000 births
  • q2 0.0001
  • q 0.01
  • The frequency of normal alleles is
  • p 1 q 1 0.01 0.99
  • The frequency of carriers is
  • 2pq 2 x 0.99 x 0.01 0.0198
  • or approximately 2 of the U.S. population

9
Conditions for Hardy-Weinberg
  • 1.) Random Matings
  • 2.) No net mutations
  • 3.) Large population size
  • 4. ) No migration
  • 5.) No natural selection

10
Hardy-Weinberg Problems
  • Page 405 of textbook
  • Review Questions
  • ( 1-10)
  • Check answers in Appendix
  • Bring questions to class

11
Microevolution
  • Generation-to-generation changes in allele or
    genotype frequencies within a population
  • 5 processes at work
  • Nonrandom mating
  • Inbreeding
  • Assortative breeding
  • Mutation
  • Genetic drift
  • Bottleneck effect
  • Founder effect
  • Gene flow
  • Natural selection

12
Fig. 23-8-3
CW CW
CR CR
CR CR
CR CR
CR CR
CR CW
CR CW
CR CR
CR CR
CR CR
CW CW
CR CR
CR CR
CW CW
CR CR
CR CW
CR CW
CR CR
CR CR
CR CR
CW CW
CR CR
CR CW
CR CR
CR CR
CR CR
CR CW
CR CW
CR CW
CR CR
Generation 1
Generation 2
Generation 3
p (frequency of CR) 0.7
p 0.5
p 1.0
q (frequency of CW ) 0.3
q 0.5
q 0.0
13
Fig. 23-9
Original population
Bottlenecking event
Surviving population
14
Fig. 23-11
15
Natural Selection 3 types
  • Stabilizing selection intermediate phenotypes
  • Directional selection 1 extreme phenotype
  • Disruptive selection favors phenotypic extremes

16
Fig. 23-13
Original population
Frequency of individuals
Phenotypes (fur color)
Original population
Evolved population
(c) Stabilizing selection
(b) Disruptive selection
(a) Directional selection
17
Genetic Variation is Necessary for Natural
Selection
  • Sources of Variation
  • Mutation
  • Sexual reproduction
  • Meiosis
  • Crossing over
  • Independent assortment
  • Random union of gametes

18
Genetic Polymorphism
  • Presence in a population of 2 alleles for a give
    locus
  • Variation
  • Low frequency of alleles

19
Balanced polymorphism
  • Type of genetic polymorphism
  • 2 alleles persist in a population over many
    generations because of natural selection
  • 2 types
  • Heterozygote advantage
  • Sickle cell
  • Frequency-dependent selection
  • More value when rare

20
Fig. 23-17
Frequencies of the sickle-cell allele
02.5
2.55.0
5.07.5
Distribution of malaria caused by Plasmodium
falciparum (a parasitic unicellular eukaryote)
7.510.0
10.012.5
gt12.5
21
Fig. 23-18
Right-mouthed
1.0
Left-mouthed
Frequency of left-mouthed individuals
0.5
0
1981
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
Sample year
22
Neutral Variation
  • Variation that does not alter the ability of an
    individual to survive and reproduce so is not
    adaptive
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