6.2 Inheritance, Variation and Evolution Flashcards
What is variation?
differences in the characteristics of individuals in a population
What are the causes of variation within a species?
- Genetics
- Environment
- A mixture of both of the above
What is genetic variation?
- variations in the genotype of organisms of the same species due to the presence of different alleles
- creates differences in phenotypes
What creates genetic variation in a species?
- spontaneous mutations
- sexual reproduction
What is a mutation?
A random change to the base sequence in DNA which results in genetic variants. They occur continuously
State the three types of gene mutation
- insertion
- deletion
- substitution
How may a gene mutation affect an organisms phenotype?
- Neutral mutation does not change the sequence of amino acids. Protein structure and function same. No effect on phenotype
- mutation may cause a minor change in an organism’s phenotype, e.g. change in eye colour
- mutation may completely change the sequence of amino acid. This may result in a non-functional protein. Severe changes to the phenotype
What is the consequence of a new phenotype caused by a mutation being suited to an environmental change?
there will be a rapid change in the species
What is evolution?
- a gradual change in the inherited traits within a population overtime
- it occurs due to natural selection which may result in the formation of a new species
What is the theory of natural selection?
All species of living things have evolved from simple life forms that first developed more than 3 billion years ago
Outline the theory of natural selection
- Genetic variation exists due to spontaneous mutations
- Selection pressures exist
- Random mutation gives an organism a selective advantage
- Organism is better adapted to the environment and survives
- organism reproduces, passing on its beneficial alleles
- frequency of advantageous alleles increase
What are examples of selection pressures?
competition or disease
How do two populations become different species?
When their phenotypes become different to the extent that they can no longer interbreed to produce a fertile offspring
What is selective breeding?
The process by which humans artificially select organisms with desirable characteristics and breed them to produce off springs with similar phenotypes
Outline the main steps involved in selective breeding (4)
- Identify a desired characteristic
- select parent organisms that show the desired traits and breed them together
- select offspring with the desired traits and breed them together
- process repeated until all off springs have the desired traits