Chapter 17: Selection and evolution Flashcards
Discontinuous variation
- Specific intermediate
- Linked gene -> advantageous
- Are entirely genetically controlled, cannot be altered by external conditions
- Bar chart represents data
- Different alleles at a single locus have large effects on the phenotype.
- Different genes have quite different effects on the phenotype.
Continuous variation
- There are many intermediates between the extremes.
- Under genetic control but there are several pairs of genes involved.
- Environment
- Normal distribution
- Different genes have the same, sometimes additive effect on the phenotype.
- A large number of genes may have a combined effect on a particular phenotypic trait
- Different alleles at a single locus have small effects on the phenotype.
Natural selection
the way in which individuals with particular characteristics have a greater chance of survival than individuals with out those characteristics, and are therefore more likely to breed and pass on the genes for these characteristics to their offspring.
Why natural selection occurs
All species have the reproductive potential to increase the sizes of their population, environmental factors come into play to limit population growth.
-> Decrease the rate of reproduction or increase the rate of mortality so that many individuals die before reaching reproductive age.
Biotic factor
caused by other living organisms
- predator, competition for food, infection by pathogens
Abiotic factor
caused by non-living components of the environment
- water supply or nutrient levels in the soil
Selection pressure
an environmental factor that confers greater chances of survival and reproduction on some individuals than on others in a population
Stabilising selection
Natural selection keeps allele frequencies as they are
Directional selection
If environmental factors that exert selection pressures change, or if new alleles appear in a population, then natural selection may cause a change in the frequencies of allele.
Evolution occurs
Over many generations, directional selection may produce large changes in allele frequencies.
Genetic drift
A change in allele frequency that occurs by chance, because only some of the organisms of each generation reproduce.
- most noticeable when a small number of individuals are separated from the rest of a large population
The Hardy-Weinberg principle
p + q = 1
p^2 + 2pq + q^2 = 1
Hardy-Weinberg principle is not applied when:
- the population is small
- significant selective pressure against one of the genotypes
- migration of individuals carrying one of the two alleles into, or out of, the population.
- non-random mating
Artificial selection
When humans purposefully apply selection pressures to populations
Selective breeding
- individuals showing one or more of desired features to a larger degree than other individuals are chosen for breeding.
- some of the alleles conferring these characteristics increase in frequency.
- repeat this for generations