17.1. Variation Flashcards

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1
Q

Variation

A

Differences in the Phenotype of individuals belonging to the same population

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2
Q

Continuous (quantitative) Variation

A

Occurs when a feature can have any value between 2 extremes, such as height and mass in humans
- caused when the effects of many genes act together to influence a characteristic and the environment can have an effect
- different alleles at a single gene locus have small effects
on the phenotype
- different genes have the same, often additive, effect on the phenotype
- a large number of genes may have a combined effect on a particular phenotypic trait; these genes are known
as polygenes.

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3
Q

Discontinuous (qualitative) Variation

A

Occurs when a feature only has a few distinct categories such as blood groups in humans
- caused by one or few genes that control the characteristic, with little or no influence from the environment
- different alleles at a single gene locus have large effects
on the phenotype
- different genes have quite different effects on the
phenotype.

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4
Q

Environmental effects of phenotype

A

One individual might have less food, or less nutritious

food, than another with the same genetic contribution, so this influences the phenotype

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5
Q

Variation in Hair Colour of Cats

A
  • At least 8 genes at different loci determine hair colouring of cats. These are known as polygenes
  • Depending on the combination of alleles that a cat has for each of these genes, it can have a wide range of colours
  • The cat hair colour genes exert their effect by coding for the production of enzymes
  • One such gene is found at the C locus
  • Siamese cats have 2 copies of this recessive allele called Cs
  • This gene codes for an enzyme that is sensitive to temperature
  • The extremities are the coldest parts of the animal, so the dark colour is produced there.
  • Lighter hair is at warmer parts of the body
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6
Q

Variation in Human Height

A
  • also affected by many different genes at different loci
  • even if a person inherits alleles of these genes that give the potential to grow tall, they will not grow tall unless the diet supplies plenty of nutrients to allow this to happen
  • poor nutrition, especially in childhood, reduces the maximum height attained
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7
Q

Cancer

A
  • risk of developing cancer is influenced by both genes and the environment
  • for example, a woman with particular alleles of the genes BRCA1 and BRCA2 has a 50-80% higher chance of developing breast cancer at some stage of her life
  • the environment, such as by smoking, can increase the risk of cancer, though
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8
Q

Why genetic variation is important in selection

A

advantageous to a population because it enables some individuals to adapt to the environment while maintaining the survival of the population

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9
Q

T-test

A

Used to determine whether the variation shown in the population is significantly different from the variation in another population

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10
Q

What can the T-test tell you?

A

If there is a statistically significant difference between 2 means, when:

  • Continuous data has been collected
  • The data is from a population that is normally distributed
  • Standard deviations are approximately the same
  • The two samples have fewer than 30 values each
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