Evolution of Populations Flashcards
Define population
Localized group of individuals (a species in an area) capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring
Two Hardy-Weinberg Equations
p + q = 1 (allele) (B, b)
p^2 + 2pq +q^2 = 1 (individuals) (BB, Bb, bb)
List the 5 conditions that a population must satisfy to remain in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (non-evolving population)
- No mutations (no genetic change)
- Random mating (no sexual selection)
- No natural selection (no alleles/genotypes selected over other)
- No genetic drift
- No gene flow (no migration) no new allele can come into the population or be lost
List the 5 conditions that a population must satisfy in order to be evolving
- Mutation
- Natural Selection
- Genetic Drift
- Gene flow
- Non-random mating (sexual selection)
Genetic Drift
Bottleneck effect and founder effect
Allele frequencies fluctuate unpredictably from one generation to the next
(causes allele frequencies to change at random)
Bottleneck effect - population is sharply reduced in size by a natural disaster
Founder effect - small group slits off from the main population to found a colony
Gene flow
Non-random movement of genes into or out of a population by migration
Reduces differences between populations over time
Population Genetics
Study of how populations change genetically over time
Microevolution
Change in allele frequencies in a population over generations
Mutations
Changes in the nucleotide sequence of DNA
(only mutations in cells that produce gametes can be passed to offspring and can change the gene pool)
Three modes of Natural Selection
- Directional Selection
- Disruptive Selection (diversifying selection)
- Stabilizing Selection
Examples of Bottleneck effect
Natural disasters - earthquakes, floods, fires
Non-random mating
If individuals (usually females) are choosy in their selection of mates, the gene frequencies may become altered.
- Sexual Selection
Directional Selection
examples?
Favors individuals at one end of the phenotypic range
ex. peppered moth (originally white, but dark phenotypes survived), antibiotic resistance, evolution of horse size, more sickle cell genes in areas that are high in malaria, giraffe neck size
Disruptive/Diversifying selection
examples?
Favors individuals at both extremes of the phenotypic range (rare)
ex. black-bellied seed crackers in Africa (either large or small beak size)
Stabilizing Selection
examples?
Favors intermediate variants and acts against extreme phenotypes
ex. human birth weight, medium height plants, Siberian husky, clutch size in birds