Mechanisms of Evolution. Five Factors Drive Evolution Mutation.

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Mechanisms of Evolution

Transcript of Mechanisms of Evolution. Five Factors Drive Evolution Mutation.

Page 1: Mechanisms of Evolution. Five Factors Drive Evolution  Mutation.

Mechanisms of Evolution

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Five Factors Drive Evolution Mutation

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Venom-like proteins first appeared about 200 million years ago

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Venoms evolved from other proteins

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Venoms were recruited from other functions

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I. Natural Selection

Green mamba is arboreal

Its venom is most effective against birds.

Black mamba is terrestrial

Its venom is most effective against mammals.

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OVERPRODUCTION

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HERITABLE VARIABILITY

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COMPETITION

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DIFFERENTIAL REPRODUCTION

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II. GENETIC DRIFT

The smaller the population, the less genetic variety it has.

In a very small population, alleles can be lost from one generation to the next, simply by random chance.

When a population evolves only because of this type of random sampling error, GENETIC DRIFT is taking place.

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FOUNDER EFFECT

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BOTTLENECK EFFECT

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AND IN 4.5 BILLION YEARS… The diversity of life on earth around us evolved.

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Measuring Genetic Change

The study of Population Genetics is the study of how the genetic makeup of populations changes from one generation to the next.

Population geneticists study how genes/traits maintained lost

…from a population’s gene pool. gene pool = all the genes at all the loci in all

members of the population

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Let’s imagine

A population of fruit flies with a gene we’ll call “X”

X codes for an important enzyme the fly needs for survival.

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Let’s imagine

A mutation of the gene results in a mutant allele we’ll call x

X is dominant. x is recessive.

The recessive version of the gene codes for a “broken” enzyme that does not work.

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Mate a heterozygous male with a homozygous XX female

x

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Predict offspring ratios with a Punnett Square

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What if two heterozygotes mated?

X

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Inbreeding

Mating between close relatives increases the chance that recessive alleles will be expressed (in homozygous individuals)

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Outbreeding

Mating between distantly related individuals decreases the chance that recessive alleles will be expressed.

Outbreeding increases heterozygosity at many gene loci. This results in…. HYBRID VIGOR

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Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium If there are two alleles for a particular

gene Then dominant alleles + recessive alleles =

100% 100% can also also be represented as

1.0 The proportion of each allele is also

called its FREQUENCY % = proportion = frequency

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Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium With two alleles, there

are three possible genotypes: XX Xx xx

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Hardy-Weinberg EqulibriumIf a population is not evolving, then you should have the same number of XX , Xx, and xx individuals in every generation.But if the proportions of XX, Xx, and xx change from one generation to the next, then the population is EVOLVING.

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Hardy-Weinberg Equlibrium Let’s call the frequency of the

dominant allele (X)… p. Let’s call the frequency of the

recessive allele (x)… q. If only X and x alleles exist, then p +

q = 1.0 If you know q, you can figure out p.

But how do we figure out q?

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Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Every xx individual carries two

recessive alleles. The frequency of the q allele in these

homozygotes is represented as q2

Only homozygous recessives will show the recessive trait.

To calculate q, take the square root of q2

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Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Since p + q = 1.0, then 1.0 – q = p Once you know both p and q, plug in

to the Hardy-Weinberg equation:

p2 + 2pq + q2 p2 is the proportion (frequency ) of XX homozygotes 2pq is the proportion (frequency) of Xx

heterozygotes q2 is the proportion (frequency) of xx homozygotes

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Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium If the relative frequencies of X and x

change from one generation to the next, then the population is evolving.

If the proportion of XX, Xx and xx individuals in a population changes from one generation to the next, then the population is evolving.

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Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium A population that is NOT EVOLVING is said to be in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.

We can use HW calculations to measure microevolution in populations.