Natural Selection and Evolution (Chapter 17) Flashcards
What is genetic drift?
A change in allele frequency that occurs by chance, because only some of the organisms of each generation reproduce
What is the founder effect?
1) a small number of individuals are separated from the rest of a large population - they form only a small sample of the original populations and ∴ this founder population is unlikely to have the same allele frequencies as the large population
2) further genetic drift in the small population will alter the allele frequencies still more and evolution of this population may take a different direction from that of the larger parent population
3) the isolated populations will likely diverge genetically also due to different selection pressures in the new area and random mutations being different in separate populations
What do selection pressures do?
Increase the chances of some allele being passed onto the next generation and decrease the chances of others e.g. predation of foxes
What is natural selection?
The effects of selection pressures on the frequency of alleles in a population
What does natural selection do?
Raises the frequency of alleles conferring an advantage and reduces the frequency of alleles conferring a disadvantage
What is the general theory of evolution?
Organisms have changed over time
What is stabilising selection?
- When selection pressures act against extremes, keeping the variation in a characteristic centred around the mean
- Keeping it the way it is
What is directional selection?
- If a new environmental factor or new allele appears, then allele frequencies may also change
- e.g. if selection acts against smaller individuals, but not larger ones, the range of variation shifts towards larger size, resulting in a change of characteristic in a particular direction
What is disruptive selection?
- This maintains different phenotypes (polymorphism) in a population
- Occurs when conditions favour both extremes of a population
- e.g. acts against those whose size is in the middle of the range
What happens in the population when a particular phenotypic trait is controlled by two alleles of a single genes, A/a?
The population will be made up of three genotypes: AA, Aa and aa
What do calculations based on the Hardy-Weinberg principle allow?
The proportions of each of these genotypes in a large, randomly mating population to be calculated
State the Hardy-Weinberg principle
The frequency of a genotype is its proportion of the total population
What are the two equations for the Hardy-Weinberg principle?
- p + q = 1
- p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1
What does p stand for?
The frequency of A (in decimals)
What does q stand for?
The frequency of a (in decimals)
Describe how the second equation for the Hardy-Weinberg principle is obtained
1) the chance of offspring inheriting a dominant/recessive allele from both parents = p x p = p2 / q x q = q2
2) the chance of offspring inheriting a dominant allele from the mother/father and a recessive allele for the father/mother = p x q = pq ∴ chance = 2pq
What are the 4 situations in which the Hardy-Weinberg population does not apply?
1) when the population is too small
2) when there is significant pressure against one of the genotypes
3) when there is migration of individuals carrying one of the two alleles into/out of the population
4) when there is non-random mating
What can happen when the ratios of the different genotypes in a population have been determined using the Hardy-Weinberg principle?
1) their predicted ratios in the next generation can be compared with the observed values
2) any differences can be tested for significance using the chi squared test
3) if the differences are significant and migration/non-random mating can be discounted, then there is evidence that directional selection is occurring in the population
What do all populations have?
The reproductive potential to increase their populations (exponentially), however under normal circumstances, this rarely happens
What happens as a population increases?
Various factors (biotic and abiotic) keep numbers down e.g. if there are increasing numbers: food will be in short supply, there may be an increase in the number of predators, or overcrowding and ∴ it is easier for disease to spread
What are biotic factors?
Factors caused by other living organisms e.g. through predation, competition for food or infection by pathogens