Genetic Drift and Gene Flow Flashcards

1
Q

what is the only evolutionary force that can cause adaptation by refining the fit between species and their environment?

A

natural selection

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2
Q

what are 2 main evolutionary forces?

A

genetic drift and gene flow

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3
Q

what are genetic drift and gene flow both infleunced by?

A
  • the demography of populations
  • movement and reproductive behaviour of individuals
  • occur relentlessly
  • independent of natural selection
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4
Q

what is genetic drift?

A

a set of population processes where sampling error (biases that occur when sample sizes are too small) affects allele frequencies

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5
Q

when does the bias caused by sampling error decrease?

A

when sample size increases

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6
Q

what are the three ways sampling error can occur?

A
  • founder effect
  • population bottlenecks
  • when populations are constant in size, but small
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7
Q

what is founder effect? explain and give an example.

A
  • occurs when a new population is founded from a small sample of colonists that usually come from a large source population
  • the large source population has lots of genetic diversity
  • but the small sample that leave to start the new population, do not have the allele frequencies that are repersentative of the population that they came from
  • most likely when a species is undergoing a major shift in distribution (ex. from volcanic stuff)
  • could occur when humans move to parts of the world they never previously existed
  • major cause: climate change. reduced genetic variability in a newly formed population might be incapcable to adapting to changing environments if they contain low genetic variation due to founder effect
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8
Q

what is an example of founder effect?

A
  • founder effect can cause high frequencies of alleles that cause medical conditions in humans
  • Porphyria amongst white Afrikanners in South Africa
  • caused by an autosomal dominant allele that inhibits the production of haem, that is incorportated into haemoglobin, which carries oxygen in red blood cells
  • the build up of porphyrins can cause blood look in teeth, calling it vampire disease
  • dominant alleles common among Afrikanners (the diseased allele) but rare in the population of the Netherlands that settled there
  • the founder event seems to come from a small sample of immigrants that arrived in south africa from the netherlands
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9
Q

what is population bottleneck?

A
  • where a population crashes to a small number of survivors, from which it might regrow
  • the small sample of survivors might have allele frequencies different from the original population, and those allele frequency biases will be transmitted to future generations as the population regrows
  • Example: greater pairie chicken: population was reduced drastically as humans converted their grassland
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10
Q

what was low genetic variation in the prairie chickens linked with?

A

low hatching success of eggs, which suggested the bottlenecked populations suffered from the genetic effects of inbreeding

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11
Q

how does a population being constant in size, but small, cause sample error? (genetic drift)

A
  • individuals within a population make uneven reproductive contributions to the next generation
  • the small sample of breeders and the few number that survive will not have the allele frequencies that repersent the population in the previous generation
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12
Q

when do we say an allele is fixed?

A

when it goes to a frequency of one

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13
Q

when do we say an allele is lost?

A

when it goes to a frequency of zero

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14
Q

if drift is strong in small populations, what correlation should we see?

A

a positive correlation between genetic variation within populations and population size.

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15
Q

what is loci polymorphic?

A

containing more than one allele

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16
Q

what is gene flow?

A
  • the movement of genes between populations. a “mixing process”
  • involves successful movement of gametes or reproductively mature individuals between populations
  • it does not take much gene flow to preserve genetic variation within populations