Evolution - Week 5 Flashcards
What is evolution?
change in heritable characteristics (traits) of biological populations (or species) over many generations
What does evolution act upon?
over entire populations, NOT individuals
What can mutations be caused by?
- DNA replication errors
- DNA repair errors
- non-disjunction
- base change in DNA that is copied during replication (it is a permanent change in DNA sequence)
What happens in nondisjunction?
before: meiosis I starts normally - tetrads line up in middle of cell
nondisjunction occurs with one set of homologs
after: meiosis II occurs normally
result: aneuploidy - all gametes have an abnormal number of chromosomes, either too many or too few
What are alleles?
genetic variants
What is a mutation?
random (unpredictable) permanent change in nucleotide sequence, and the source of completely new alleles
What are neutral mutations?
most mutations are expected to be (relatively) neutral with respect to fitness, because most mutations will have little to no impact on phenotype
What are lethal mutations?
we rarely se them because they die before they are observed
What are deleterious mutations?
harmful mutations
What are beneficial mutations?
result in individual having a higher fitness (more likely to reproduce)
Describe actual mutations vs. observed mutations.
our observations of mutation rates may not reflect what actually happened in evolutionary history of a population
What is adaptive evolution?
called adaptive: because allele frequencies are increasing or decreasing based on how they affect the organism’s fitness
called evolution: because allele frequencies in the population are changing between generations
What do mutations introduce?
new alleles that may be lethal, detrimental, or beneficial in nature
Why is a mutation not a significant mechanisms of evolutionary change on its own?
it is comparatively infrequent
What is the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium used for?
to compare predicted vs. observed genotype frequencies
What is the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium equation?
p^2 +2pq + q^2 = 1
where p = allele #1
where q = allele #2
where p + q = 1
What assumptions do we make when we predict offspring genotype frequencies using the H-W equilibrium?
- random fusion of gametes (random mating)
- infinitely large population (no change in allele frequencies due to sampling bias
- no other changes in allele frequencies between generations (no evolution through evolutionary mechanisms)
How do we test whether or not a population is in H-W equilibrium?
we need to compared predicted genotype frequencies to observed genotype frequencies
ie. p + q = 1 does not mean the population is in H-W equilibrium
ie. p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1 does not mean the population is in H-W equilibrium
these tell you your math is correct, but doesn’t tell you if the population is undergoing non-random mating or evolution
How do you calculate allele frequency?
(# copies of particular allele) / (total # of alleles)
How do you calculate genotype frequency?
- multiply the allele frequencies
- frequencies should add up to 1
What does a population that is not in H-W equilibrium tell you?
- the population is not necessarily evolving
- one of the H-W model assumptions has been violated
What is a null hypothesis?
hypothesis that there is no significant difference between specified populations, any observed difference being due to sampling or experimental error