Rates and patterns of evolution Flashcards
Lec 13
Evolution definition
the change in heritable characteristics of populations over successive generations
a change in frequency of different alleles (gene variants) in a population
Microevolution –> macroevolution
micro - within a population, accumulation of small changes, can be on small time scale
macro - evolution over geological time (new species)
Taxon
scientifically classified group
seen in phylogeny
Trait
observable feature in the phenotype of an organism
physical, physiological, behavioral
Are all traits equally likely to have viable mutations? how fast, how common?
No!
most mutations are fatal, change organs
mutation in for a trait that is controlled by multiple genes (height), one mutation will not change phenotype
different areas of genome more vulnerable to mutations
How fast do traits evolve?
traits that are under heavy selection from the environment evolve faster than genetic drift
typically, evolve slowly
do species become more complex over time?
massive amount of variation of size of genome in organisms
after unicellular –> multicellular eukaryotes
species don’t necesarrily become more complex over time
Complexity evolution
general trend towards specialization in traits over time
lose generalized traits to become better adapted to a very specific niche
ex: orchid and mycorrhizae symbiosis
Can a species regain a trait if it is lost through evolution?
rare but expression can be turned on and off so easier to regain trait
organisms retain genes that are turned off
Irreducible complexity
traits whose functions have become so essential to life, losing them through evolution seems impossible (ex: pikia development of the spinal column)
Key Innovations of trait evolution
flight, hard bodies, seeds
The island rule
lots of allopatric speciation
change size, either larger or smaller
smaller mainland animals get bigger, bigger animals get smaller
basically, selection pressure (especially for size) changes as there are no predators
Insular Dwarfism
selection for large body size in herbivore is reduced
because prey tends to be smaller on islands
and not as many predators (large bodies scare predators)
Insular gigantism
new carnivore species can become larger to fill the niche of apex predators
taxonomic rates of evolution
calibrated with fossil record, compare the number of changes
molecular clock (DNA sequences evolve at a rate that is relatively constant over time and among organisms)
not constant over time