Title: Assortative mating
1Assortative mating Female mate choice 1.
Head-color match healthier chicks Sex ratio
5050 2. Mismatched matings Weak female chicks
(die) Shortage of compatible males 70 chicks
are male Head-dying experiments Sex ratio 5050
Sex determined by female Therefore, she must
be choosing what?
Gouldian finch
2Evolutionary effects of gene flow and genetic
drift
3Gene flow
Can counter natural selection
4Nerodia sipedon
5Allele diversity in Zosterops lateralis
6Genetic Drift
- Natural populations (unlike Hardy-Weinberg
populations) are finite in size. - Geographically structured so that mating is not
random. - Demes
- In small isolated populations, alleles can
fluctuate by chance (genetic drift). - Therefore, genetic drift is an evolutionary
force. - But GD is non-directional and cannot produce
adaptations.
7- Sometimes a new population is established by a
small number of COLONISTS or FOUNDERS, through - 1. Dispersal (geographic)
- 2. Vicariance (geological)
- 3. Bottleneck (population is drastically
decreased in size -- reestablishment of the
population by a small number of founders. - All such populations experience a loss of genetic
variability. - e.g., a gene locus has 25 alleles. A new
population is founded by 10 individuals. No way
that all of this allele variation can be
represented.
8- E.g., Tristan da Cunha Island
- Most remote inhabited island on Earth
- Colonized in 1816 by William Glass, wife, two
daughters - Joined later by a few additional settlers from
England
1,750 mi. from South Africa 2,088 mi. from South
America 38 mi2
9- 1961 volcanic eruption
- Population (294) evacuated and taken back to
England - Population had been isolated for 145 years
- All residents homozygous (fixed) for nine genetic
markers - e.g., clinodactyly (dominant) present in the
Glass family. - Gene Flow
- Alternative glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase
allele arrived in 1827.
10- Because new small populations generally
experience slow growth, genetic drift continues
to reduce genetic variation. - Heterozygosity decreases and homozygosity
increases. - Genetic drift operates independently on
geographically isolated populations. - Frequency of an allele might increase in some
populations, decrease in others. - Populations diverge as different alleles become
fixed in each.
11Computer modeling of genetic drift Start with
heterozygous individuals
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14Drift in a lab 107 experimental populations of
Drosophila Started with heterozygous individuals
bw75/bw Random draws of 8 males 8 females for
subsequent generations Population size kept at N
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15Reduction in heterozygosity
Distributions of the numbers of bw75 alleles in
107 lines of D. melanogaster
16Natural Examples of Drift
Genotypic variation Pocket gopher Thomomys bottae
825 individuals 50 geographic localities Two
polymorphic gene loci
150 described subspecies
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18Desert 8,000 to 4,000 ybp Contiguous with SW
deserts Then retreat of deserts to SW
Present oak-hickory forest Relictual
populations 12 or so individs per deme