Title: Gene Pools, Selection
1Gene Pools, Selection Drift
2Terms
- Population localized group of individuals
belonging to the same species - Species group of pops. whose individuals have
the potential to interbreed and produce fertile
offspring - Gene Pool total aggregate of genes in a pop at
any one time - Speciation the formation of new species
3Natural Variation in Phenotype
- Each kind of gene in gene pool may have two or
more alleles - Individuals inherit different allele combinations
- This leads to variation in phenotype
- Offspring inherit genes, not phenotypes
4What determines the allele combos in a Gene Pool
- 1. Gene mutation
- 2. Change in chromo or structure
- 3. Crossing over at meiosis I
- 4. Independent assortment at meiosis I
- 5. Fertilization
- ONLY MUTATIONS CREATE NEW ALLELES!
5Genetic Equilibrium
- Allele frequencies at a locus are not changing
- Population is not evolving
6Hardy-Weinberg Rule
- At genetic equilibrium, proportions of genotypes
at a locus with two alleles are given by the
equation - p2 (AA) 2pq (Aa) q2 (aa) 1
- Frequency of allele A p
- Frequency of allele a q
7Punnett Square
8Frequencies in Gametes
F1 genotypes
Gametes
9Five Conditions
- 1. No mutation
- 2. Random mating
- 3. Gene doesnt affect survival or reproduction
- 4. Large population
- 5. No immigration/emigration
10Gene Flow
- Physical flow of alleles into a population
- Tends to keep the gene pools of populations
similar - Counters the differences that result from
mutation, natural selection, and genetic drift - Balanced polymorphism (variation)
11 Balanced Polymorphism
- Polymorphism - having many forms
- Occurs when two or more alleles are maintained at
frequencies greater than 1 percent - Variation is good lotto!
12No Change through Generations
STARTING POPULATION
490 AA butterflies Dark-blue wings
420 Aa butterflies Medium-blue wings
90 aa butterflies White wings
THE NEXT GENERATION
490 AA butterflies
420 Aa butterflies
90 aa butterflies
NO CHANGE
THE NEXT GENERATION
490 AA butterflies
420 Aa butterflies
90 aa butterflies
NO CHANGE
13Microevolutionary Processes
- Drive a population away from genetic equilibrium
- Small-scale changes in allele frequencies brought
about by - Natural selection
- Gene flow
- Genetic drift
- Inbreeding
- Artificial Selection
14Gene Mutations
- Increase gene pool variation raw material for
evolution - Infrequent but inevitable
- Each gene has own mutation rate
- Lethal mutations
- Neutral mutations
- Advantageous mutations
15Natural Selection
- A difference in the survival and reproductive
success of different phenotypes - Acts directly on phenotypes and indirectly on
genotypes
16 Reproductive Capacity Competition
- All populations have the capacity to increase in
numbers - No population can increase indefinitely
- Eventually the individuals of a population will
end up competing for resources
17Directional Selection
Number of individuals in the population
Range of values for the trait at time 1
- Allele frequencies shift in one direction
- Ex Pesticide resistance, Antibiotic resistance,
peppered moth
Number of individuals in the population
Range of values for the trait at time 2
Number of individuals in the population
Range of values for the trait at time 3
18Stabilizing Selection
Number of individuals in the population
- Intermediate forms are favored and extremes are
eliminated - Ex Gall-making fly has two major predators
- Wasps prey on larvae in small galls
- Birds eat larvae in large galls
- Flies that cause intermediate-sized galls have
the highest fitness
Range of values for the trait at time 1
Range of values for the trait at time 2
Range of values for the trait at time 3
19Disruptive Selection
Number of individuals in the population
- Forms at both ends of the range of variation are
favored - Intermediate forms are selected against
- Ex Selection favors birds with very large or
very small bills - Birds with intermediate-sized bill are less
effective feeders
Range of values for the trait at time 1
Number of individuals in the population
Range of values for the trait at time 2
Number of individuals in the population
Range of values for the trait at time 3
20Sexual Selection
- Selection favors certain secondary sexual
characteristics - Through nonrandom mating, alleles for preferred
traits increase - Leads to increased sexual dimorphism
21Sexual Selection
- Traits which attract mates
- Include behavioral, structural and physiological
- May work against natural selection or have no
affect. - Fitness - it is the one who passes on its genes
(mates effectively) which will create future
generations!
22Peacock
23Cuttlefish mating spermatophorelike a phone
number
24Guppies
- Drab Females vs. Colorful males!
25Genetic Drift
- Random change in allele frequencies brought about
by chance not selection - Effect is most pronounced in small populations
- Sampling error - Fewer times an event occurs,
greater the variance in outcome - Founder Effect
- Inbreeding
26Bottleneck
- A severe reduction in population size
- Causes pronounced drift, alleles are lost
27Founder Effect
- Effect of drift when a small number of
individuals starts a new population - By chance, allele frequencies of founders may not
be same as those in original population - Effect is pronounced on isolated islands/areas
- Polydactylism in Amish
28Inbreeding
- Nonrandom mating between related individuals
- Leads to increased homozygosity
- Can lower fitness when deleterious recessive
alleles are expressed
29Artificial Selection
- Traits NOT selected for by nature, but by man
- AKA selective breeding
- Domestication of animals dogs, cats, etc
- Bred for behavioral and physical traits NOT
necessarily best fit for organisms natural
environment - Humans can CAUSE evolution do it every day
soaps, pet breeds, weed killer, food
industry/agriculture. - THE EVOLUTION EXPLOSION
30Canus familiaris lots of variation selected for
by humans!