Lecture 20: Population structure, gene flow and genetic drift Flashcards

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1
Q

What is gene flow?

A

Movement of genes from one population to another, typically via migration

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2
Q

What is a key difference between natural selection and gene flow taking place in a different environment?

A

Gene flow always acts to make populations more homogenized to one another no matter if the population lives in a similar environment or not

But if you have natural selection in a different environment, it will act to drive the populations away, and make populations differ. (i.e local natural selection upon a population)

Genetic drift will also cause populations to be different from each other.

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3
Q

What is an important property that determines how different populations will be from each other?

A

Gene flow

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4
Q

How does gene flow change between populations? What was an example of the experiment?

A

Gene flow reduces exponentially as the distance increases, this was seen experimentally by comparing the gene flow between cultivated sunflowers and the weedy ones.

X-axis: Had the frequency
Y axis: The distance in kilometers

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5
Q

What is genetic drift?

A

Random fluctuations happen in allele frequency in random.

GENETIC DRIFT DOES NOT DRIVE evolution in a particular direction.

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6
Q

What are the types of Stochastic evolutionary forces?

A
  1. Mutations: Random changes with respect to fitness.
  2. Recombination: Shuffling up alleles randomly.
  3. Genetic Drift: Random flow of genes
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7
Q

What is Deterministic force in Evolution?

A

Natural Selection: (predictable or non-random evolutionary force)

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8
Q

What is a key feature of genetic drift?

A

It drives to loss of biodiversity. ESPECIALLY when populations are small.

It leads to stochastic changes in allele frequency, due to random changes in fecundity and mortality.

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9
Q

What are the examples of Stochastic processes resulting in loss of diversity?

A
  1. Genetic Drift
  2. Population Bottleneck
  3. Founder effect
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10
Q

What is founder effect?

A

It is colonization by a few individuals that start a new population

The colonizing group contains only a limited diversity compared to the source population.

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11
Q

What is population bottle neck?

A

The sharp reduction in population due to reduction in abundance, is usually followed by a Rebound.

It results in a loss of biodiversity.

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12
Q

How does random fluctuation change in allele frequency change with population size?

A

Genetic drift is more profound when populations are small

More drastic fluctuations in populations

More rapid loss of biodiversity

Faster time for allele loss or fixation

Less consistency across replicate populations.

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13
Q

What leads to less genetic diversity in human population in Americas?

A

More genetic variation is found in Africa, while relatively fewer populations have migrated to Americas, and a series of bottleneck effects lead to low genetic diversity.

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14
Q

How does geographic pattern affect population genetic similarity?

A

Plants closer have more gene flow, and less fixed genes between them

Populations further away have more genetic drift, less gene flow, and are more differentiated than populations that are closer to each other.

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15
Q

Why does the human population have relatively no fixed genes between them?

A

Because they have experienced relatively recent origins and there is more gene flow.

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16
Q

Why did the human population differ from east Africa?

A

East Africa had more gene flow, which was reduced as the migration’s distance increased.

There was more genetic drift in the migrated population.

17
Q

What causes Phenotypic differentiation?

A

Adaptive OR
Genetic Drift OR
Phenotypic plasticity

18
Q

What is an example of only phenotypic plasticity?

A

Arrowhead, aquatic plants growing on land differ than those in water, this is only due to genetic plasticity

19
Q

What is phenotypic plasticity?

A

the ability of a genotype to modify its phenotype in response to the changes to the environment.

20
Q

How does phenotypic plasticity occur?

A

Occurs through modifications to growth development and behavior. (this is under the control of genetic control)

21
Q

Where is phenotypic plasticity common in?

A

In sedentary organisms

22
Q

Is phenotypic plasticity adaptive?

A

not all are adaptive, but usually it is adaptive to unpredictable environment.

23
Q

What were the conclusions from the Clausen-Keck-Heisey Transplant conclusion?

A

Differences in plants are due to both plasticity and genetics.

There is evidence for widespread local adaptation and local populations had the highest fitness.

24
Q

What are the tradeoffs in human skin pigmentation?

A

High UV radiation interferes with folate, hence population living there must have been selected for more pigmentation

Low UV radiation, reduced vitamin D synthesis, hence it could have been selected for less pigmentation.

25
Q

Why is there no single ‘best’ phenotype across the globe?

A

Due to Tradeoff’s.

26
Q

What are other proofs for selection for skin pigmentation?

A

Alleles affecting the pigmentation have evolved rapidly, (natural selection must have acted)

Genes of pigmentation show one of the highest levels- of population difference than most other genes. Evidence supporting a history of local adaptation.