The Process of Evolution
Home >
Biology 103: Botany >
Exam Two
Learning Objectives
- Understand the process of evolution.
- Understand the factors that impact allele frequency.
- Understand how speciation occurs.
- Understand how neutral or non-favorable traits can remain in a population.
Solutions
- Evolution is sexual or reproductive fitness. The more something can reproduce, the stronger evolution will be. More reproduction means more of its alleles in the gene pool.
- The factors that affect allele frequency are outlined in the Hardy-Weinberg Law. Allele frequency is influenced by:
- No mutations (versus mutations)
- Isolation from other populations (versus gene flow)
- Large population size (versus genetic drift)
- Random mating (versus no-random mating)
- No natural selection (versus natural selection)
- Speciation occurs in two primary ways:
- Geographic: two species are separated by geography for an extended period of time, to the point where they are no long able to reproduce.
- Temporal: two species do not have any overlapping seasons in which they reproduce, to the point where they are no longer able to reproduce.
- Neutral or unfavorable traits can remain in a population for three main reasons:
- They are linked to a favorable trait (close together on the chromosome)
- They are favorable in certain environments (sickle cell anemia more common in areas with higher malaria incidence as sickle cell creates resistance to it)
- If the heterozygous phenotype has higher fitness (keeps the recessive allele in the population)
Notes
Evolutionary Considerations
- What is the main goal of all organisms? They live long enough to reproduce.
- Can every organism reproduce to it's fullest capacity? Only if there are enough resources for every organism, which there usually aren't.
- Given genetic variability in a population, which organisms will be more successful? Whichever will reproduce the most.
- Over time, which individuals will make up a higher percentage of a population? Whichever is best suited to the environment over time.
- How do some individuals become better adapted to an environment? More suitable adaptations come from mutations.
- All genetic variation is due to mutations.
Gene Pool
- All of the genes of all of the individuals in a population of a given species
- Different alleles make up different proportions of the gene pool
- Genetic fitness if the ability to produce offspring
Hardy-Weinberg Law
- Allele frequencies in a given population stay the same provided that:
- No mutations
- Isolation for other populations
- Large population size
- Random mating
- No universal selection
- This gives scientists a baseline expectation to compare observations to
- If allele frequencies start to change, one of these five things isn't true for the population
- Standard for detecting evolutionary change
Genetic Variation
- Change in allele frequency: evolution
- Things that change allele frequency
- Mutations
- Gene flow
- Genetic drift
- Non-random mating
- Natural selection
- Inverse of the Hardy-Weinberg Law
Gene Flow
- Pollen or seeds from one population entering another population
- New alleles introduced
- Change in allele frequency
- Can have new alleles or different proportions of same alleles
Genetic Drift
- Occurs in small populations
- Even if allele frequencies are the same, random chance could result in the loss of one allele
Comparison of Gene Flow versus Genetic Drift
- Gene flow
- Change across space
- Multiple populations
- Population size doesn't matter
- Genetic drift
- Change across time
- Single initial population
- Mainly in small populations
Genetic Drift: Founder Effect
- Proportion of plants founding a new population isn't equal to the parent population
Genetic Drift: Bottleneck Effect
- Any event that kills a large proportion of population
- Dinosaurs + asteroid = chickens
Non-Random Mating
- Upsets Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium
- Non-random mating patterns:
- Inbreeding: mating between related individuals
- Positive assortive and negative assortive mating with respect to specific phenotypes mating together
- Plants will more likely mate with other plants in close proximity
- Results in more homozygotes and less heterozygotes
Speciation
- Separation of one population into two
- Can be:
- Geographic: separated by space
- Temporal: separated by time
- Occurs when two different populations mate at different times
- Makes mating between populations impossible
- ex: winter versus summer pansies
Evolution
- When might a neutral or non-favorable trait remain in a population?
- When it's linked to a favorable (close to each other on the chromosome)
- When it's favorable in certain environments (having sickle cell anemia provides much greater resistance to malaria)
- If the heterozygous phenotype has a higher evolutionary fitness (keeps the homozygous recessive gene in the population)