MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

20
MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION Honors Biology

description

MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION. Honors Biology. REVIEW. Evidence for Evolution and Examples What is Natural Selection? How did Darwin develop theory of Natural Selection?. PATTERNS OF EVOLUTION. Coevolution: 2 or more species evolve in association with one another - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

Page 1: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

Honors Biology

Page 2: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

REVIEW

• Evidence for Evolution and Examples• What is Natural Selection?• How did Darwin develop theory of Natural Selection?

Page 3: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

PATTERNS OF EVOLUTION

• Coevolution:– 2 or more species evolve in association with one

another– Predators and Prey– Plants and Pollinators– Bats and Flowers

Page 4: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

PATTERNS OF EVOLUTION

• Convergent Evolution:– Organisms that look similar but are not related– Analogous features– Similar environments– Sharks and Dolphins

Page 5: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

PATTERNS OF EVOLUTION

• Divergent Evolution– 2 or more related populations or species become

more and more dissimilar – Usually a response to new habitat– Can result in new species– Adaptive radiation– Artificial Breeding– Humans and Chimps

Page 6: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

POPULATION GENETICS AND EVOLUTION

• What did Darwin know?– Environment is important– Competition for Resources– Natural Selection: Individuals with traits more

suitable for a particular environment are more likely to survive AND reproduce

• What did Darwin not know?– Where does variation come from

Page 7: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

POPULATION GENETICS

• We now know that variation comes from genetics; no variation extinction

• Population genetics: study of evolution from genetic point of view

Page 8: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

WHAT CAUSES VARIATION

• Need to think about variation in GENOTYPE– Mutation: change in DNA/chromosomes– Recombination: during meiosis– Random fusion of gametes

Page 9: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

OTHER MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

• Things that upset genetic equilibrium• Using Hardy Weinberg you can predict

genotypes; Only in hypothetical populations

Page 10: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

MUTATION

• Change in DNA or chromosomes• Make new alleles for a trait• Many are harmful• Can be neutral (code for same amino acid)• Some are beneficial

Page 11: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

MIGRATION/GENE FLOW

• Call it gene flow• Populations exchange genes• Increases within group variation• Decreases between group variation• DOESN’T HAVE TO BE MIGRATION

Page 12: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

GENETIC DRIFT

• Occurs in small populations• Allele frequencies shift as a result of RANDOM

events• Coin Toss• Founders Effect; Bottleneck

Page 13: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

NONRANDOM MATING

• Sexual Selection• Positive assortative mating – mate with

someone similar• Negative assortative mating: redheads!

Page 14: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

NATURAL SELECTION

• Darwin and neoDarwinians believe is the most important way evolution occurs

• Types of Selection

Page 15: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

STABILIZING SELECTION

• Average form are selected for• Lizards:– Predators caught slow small and large visible– Select for medium size

Page 16: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

DIRECTIONAL SELECTION

• Individuals with an extreme trait are selected for

• Anteaters with long tongues

Page 17: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

DISRUPTIVE SELECTION

• Individuals with either extreme are selected for

• Limpet shell color; light and dark on different surfaces

Page 18: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

SEXUAL SELECTION

• Choosing mates based on traits• Intersexual Selection• Intrasexual Selection• Bird Color

Page 19: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

SPECIATION

• If enough changes accumulate new species• Biological concept of species: organisms can

mate and produce fertile offspring; not just morphological (what they look like)

• Isolating mechanisms speciation– Geographic isolation– Reproductive isolation

Page 20: MECHANISMS FOR EVOLUTION

SPECIATION

• Rates of speciation– Gradualism: species evolve gradually over time– Punctuated equilibrium: species go through times of fast change and slow or no change