🔬General Biology I Unit 19 – The Evolution of Populations
Evolution of populations is a dynamic process driven by genetic variation and environmental pressures. This unit explores key mechanisms like natural selection, genetic drift, and gene flow that shape allele frequencies within populations over time.
Understanding population genetics is crucial for grasping how species adapt and diversify. We'll examine concepts like the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, fitness, and speciation to see how evolutionary forces create the biodiversity we observe in nature.
Recombination during meiosis shuffles alleles to create new combinations on chromosomes
Independent assortment of chromosomes during meiosis I contributes to genetic variation
Sexual reproduction combines genetic material from two parents to produce offspring with unique genotypes
Migration between populations can introduce new alleles or change existing allele frequencies
Horizontal gene transfer the transfer of genetic material between organisms without reproduction (bacteria, viruses)
Natural Selection in Action
Stabilizing selection favors intermediate phenotypes and reduces variation
Human birth weight too low or too high reduces survival
Directional selection shifts the population towards one extreme of a trait
Antibiotic resistance in bacteria, pesticide resistance in insects
Disruptive selection favors extreme phenotypes over intermediate ones
Beak size in African seedcracker finches, resource polymorphism in fish
Sexual selection can lead to exaggerated traits in one sex
Peacock tail feathers, lion manes, deer antlers
Artificial selection human-driven selection for desired traits in domesticated species
Dog breeds, crop plants, livestock
Balancing selection maintains multiple alleles in a population
Sickle cell anemia heterozygote advantage in malaria-endemic regions
Population Genetics and Gene Pools
Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium a mathematical model for predicting genotype frequencies in a non-evolving population
Assumptions: no mutation, no migration, no natural selection, large population size, random mating
Equation: p2+2pq+q2=1 (p and q are allele frequencies)
Microevolution changes in allele frequencies within a population over generations
Genetic drift random changes in allele frequencies due to chance events
Founder effect a small group establishes a new population with a different allele frequency (Amish, Ashkenazi Jews)
Bottleneck effect a population undergoes a drastic reduction in size, reducing genetic variation (cheetahs, northern elephant seals)
Effective population size (Ne) the number of individuals in an idealized population that would experience genetic drift at the same rate as the actual population
Accounts for factors like unequal sex ratios, variation in reproductive success, and population fluctuations
Adaptation and Fitness
Adaptation a trait that enhances an organism's survival and reproduction in a specific environment
Camouflage in prey animals (peppered moths, stick insects)
Mimicry one species evolves to resemble another (viceroy butterfly mimics monarch)
Fitness the ability of an individual to survive and reproduce in a given environment
Absolute fitness the total number of offspring an individual produces
Relative fitness compares the fitness of one genotype to another in a population
Inclusive fitness considers the reproductive success of an individual and its relatives