evolution may lead to speciation Flashcards
Explain why individuals within a population of a species may show a wide
range of variation in phenotype
● Genetic factors
○ Mutations = primary source of genetic variation
○ Crossing over between homologous chromosomes during meiosis
○ Independent segregation of homologous chromosomes during meiosis
○ Random fertilisation of gametes during sexual reproduction
● Environmental factors (depends on context - eg. food availability, light intensity)
What is evolution?
● Change in allele frequency over time / many generations in a population
● Occurring through the process of natural selection
Describe factors that may drive natural selection
● Predation, disease and competition for the means of survival
● These result in differential survival and reproduction, ie. natural selection
Explain the principles of natural selection in the evolution of populations
- Mutations
Random gene mutations can result in [named] new alleles of a gene - Advantage
Due to [named] selection pressure, the new allele might benefit its possessor
[explain why] → organism has a selective advantage - Reproductive success Possessors are more likely to survive and have increased reproductive success
- Inheritance Advantageous allele is inherited by members of the next generation (offspring)
- Allele frequency
Over many generations, [named] allele increases in frequency in the gene pool
Explain the effects of stabilising selection
● Organisms with alleles coding for average /
modal variations of a trait have a selective
advantage (eg. babies with an average weight)
● So frequency of alleles coding for average
variations of a trait increase and those coding
for extreme variations of a trait decrease
● So range / standard deviation is reduced
Explain the effects of directional selection
● Organisms with alleles coding for one extreme
variation of a trait have a selective advantage
(eg. bacteria with high resistance to an antibiotic)
● So frequency of alleles coding for this extreme
variation of the trait increase and those coding for
the other extreme variation of the trait decrease
Explain the effects of disruptive selection
● Organisms with alleles coding for either extreme
variation of a trait have a selective advantage
● So frequency of alleles coding for both extreme
variations of the trait increase and those coding for
the average variation of the trait decrease
● This can lead to speciation
Describe speciation (how new species arise from existing species)
- Reproductive separation of two populations (of the same species)
- This can result in accumulation of differences in their gene pools
- New species arise when these genetic differences lead to an inability of
members of the populations to interbreed and produce fertile offspring
Describe allopatric speciation
- Population is split due to geographical isolation (eg. new river formed)
- This leads to reproductive isolation, separating gene pools by preventing
interbreeding / gene flow between populations - Random mutations cause genetic variation within each population
- Different selection pressures / environments act on each population
- So different advantageous alleles are selected for / passed on in each population
- So allele frequencies within each gene pool change over many generations
- Eventually different populations cannot interbreed to produce fertile offspring
Describe sympatric speciation
- Population is not geographically isolated
- Mutations lead to reproductive isolation, separating gene pools by preventing
interbreeding / gene flow within one population, eg.
● Gamete incompatibility
● Different breeding seasons (eg. different flowering times)
● Different courtship behaviour preventing mating
● Body shape / size changes preventing mating - Different selection pressures act on each population
- So different advantageous alleles are selected for / passed on in each population
- So allele frequencies within each gene pool change over many generations
- Eventually different populations cannot interbreed to produce fertile offspring
Explain genetic drift and its importance in small populations
● Genetic drift = a mechanism of evolution in which allele frequencies in a population change over
generations due to chance
● As some alleles are passed onto offspring more / less often by chance
○ Regardless of selection pressures and whether alleles give a selective advantage
● So strongest effects in small populations as gene pool is small and chance has a greater influence
○ Eg. when a population is sharply reduced in size (bottleneck effect)
○ Eg. when a small, new colony forms from a main population (founder effect)
● This can reduce genetic diversity - some alleles can become fixed or lost entirely