Lecture 11 Flashcards
1
Q
What are 4 key evolutionary mechanisms?
A
- Natural selection (positive or negative)
- Genetic drift (random changes)
- Gene flow (migration)
- Mutation (source of new alleles; mostly random
2
Q
What are the 3 modes of selection?
A
- directional, stabilizing and disruptive selection
3
Q
explain directional selection
A
- favours one extreme phenotype, causing the average phenotype in the population to change in one direction
4
Q
explain stabilizing selection
A
- favours phenotypes near the middle fo the range of phenotypic variation, maintaining average phenotype
5
Q
explain disruptive selection
A
- favours extreme phenotypes at both ends of the range of phenotypic variation
- may initiate speciation
6
Q
Who had discoveries of particulate inheritance (genes) using pea plants
A
gregor mendel
7
Q
What is the Mendelian Inheritance
A
- classic experiment with pea plants
8
Q
explain mendelian inheritance
A
- inheritance in sexual species does not operate by “blending” characters of parents
- inheritance is “particulate,” controlled by segments of DNA we now call genes
- some traits are dominant to other recessive ones (he coined the terms)
- the type of gamete (male or female) does not affect the inheritance of traits
- pea traits chosen segregated independently of each other in meiosis (lucky choice: different genes located on the same chromosome do not segregate independently)
9
Q
Why did Mendel choose garden peas and what did he do with them?
A
- 2n =14
- easy to grow and polymorphic (many forms) for flower color and other easily visible traits of pods and seeds
- pea flowers normally self-pollinate. Therefore, Mendale artificially made crosses by removing anthers from one flower and transferring pollen from another with an artist’s brush
10
Q
What is the principle of independent assortment
A
- the genes for seed shape and seed colour assort independently, because they are located on different chromosomes and these chromosomes have 2 equally likely ways of lining up before they are segregated
11
Q
Review Mendel’s model to explain the results of a monohybrid cross
A
- peas have 2 copies of each gene and thus many have 2 different alleles of the gene. This is true for many other organisms
- Genes are particles of inheritance that do not blend together. Genes do not change when being transmitted between generations
- Each gamete contains one copy of each gene (one allele). This is due to the principle of segregation - the members of each gene pair segregate during the formation of gametes
- Males and females contribute equally to the genotype of their offspring. When gametes fuse, offspring acquire a total of 2 of each gene - one from each parent
- some alleles are dominant to other alleles. When a dominant and a recessive allele for a gene are paired in a heterozygote, that individual has the dominant phenotype
12
Q
What are the 3 misconceptions about dominant & recessive alleles and what are their clarifications?
A
- dominant traits are more likely to be inherited : dominant and recessive alleles are equally likely to be passed on after meiosis (50:50)
- recessive alleles are not expressed : both can be expressed (recessives mostly if homozygous)
- dominant alleles are more common than recessive alleles : the frequency of an allele is independent of whether it is dominant or recessive