Title: Determine whether evolution occurs by mechanisms other than selection.
1Objectives
- Determine whether evolution occurs by mechanisms
other than selection. - Compare and contrast population outcomes
resulting from selection versus random events.
2Can evolution occur by mechanisms other than
selection?
- Genetic drift
- Gene flow.
- Campbell, Chapter 23, pp.475-485
3Plant Scenario 1 Initial Population
4Late Spring Freeze
5Late Spring Freeze
Who dies? . . .and therefore, does not
reproduce.....
6Consequence of Late Spring Freeze?
Clicker Q1
A increase decrease
B increase no change
C no change no change
D decrease increase
E decrease no change
7Survivors
8Survivors Reproduce ? All Blue Population
9Plant Scenario 1 Genetic Drift
- Change in allele frequencies in a population over
time due to random (stochastic) events in
environment
10Plant Scenario 2 Initial Population
Q What if blue was better able to survive the
effects of a spring freeze?
11LATE SPRING FREEZE
Q What if blue was better able to survive the
effects of a spring freeze?
12LATE SPRING FREEZE
Q What if blue was better able to survive the
effects of a spring freeze? Who dies? . . .and
therefore, does not reproduce...
13Late Spring Freeze
Q What if blue was better able to survive the
effects of a spring freeze?
Who dies? . . .and therefore, does not reproduce
14Survivors
15Survivors Reproduce
The outcome is All Blue Population. Same end
result as Scenario 1. Is the mechanism the same?
16Plant Scenario 3 Initial Population
A squirrel drops a seed from a fruit it found
across the road.
17Immigration new alleles are introduced
into the population by interbreeding
18What happens over time. . .
19Gene Flow
- Physical movement of alleles into or out of a
population by immigration/emigration.
20Summary Mechanisms of Evolution
- Selection (natural, sexual, artificial)
- Genetic Drift (random events in environment)
- Gene Flow (immigration/emigration)
21Scales of Evolution
- Microevolution Macroevolution
Small scale changes in allele frequencies
Variability in population traits
Large-scale changes Origin of new species
22What is a species?
- In your group, write down a definition of species.
23What is a species?
- Biological Species Concept
- Population of organisms capable of interbreeding
AND producing viable and fertile offspring - Can you think of any exceptions to this
definition? - Campbell, Chapter 24, pp.
487-492
24Could speciation happen here?
25A road is built that prevents pollen exchange.
26Resulting subpopulations cant interbreed due to
barrier
27Divergence
28Divergence
- Accumulation of genetic change over time (due to
drift, flow, different selective agents, random
mutations)
29can no longer interbreed with
If
then the 2 subpopulations have achieved
reproductive isolation ? new species!
30Reminder Scales of Evolution
- Microevolution Macroevolution
Small scale changes in allele frequencies
Variability in population traits
Large-scale changes Origin of new species
31Speciation
- Origination of new species resulting from
reproductive isolation of populations that have
diverged