Selection Drift Flashcards
What is micro-evolution? What is macro-evolution? What are the differences between them?
Micro-evolution: selection on small differences in phenotypic traits
Macro-evolution: short period of rapid evolution followed by longer periods of stasis
What are w and s? How can they be calculated?
w is the relative fitness of a population.
s is the selection coefficient.
What are the four selection models?
- Complete dominance: the phenotype is determined by
one of two alleles; the other is recessive
- Complete dominance: the phenotype is determined by
- Codominance: both alleles are expressed and can be
recognized in the phenotype - Overdominance = heterosis = heterozygote advantage
What types of selection there are? How do they affect genetic variation?
- Stabilizing selection:
- reduce variation
- more and more individuals are in the optimal state
- Directional selection:
- shift of trait due to environmental changes
- Diversifying selection:
- two traits evolve
- two species
What is neutral evolution? What is the effect on the population?
Neutral evolution is undirected changes in allele frequencies arising from
the fact that offspring genetic make-up is a sample of
the parental genomes.
- Bottleneck effect: near extinction
- Founder effect: migrations
Why accelerated evolution can take place in small populations?
A population established by a single colonization event often shows deviating genetic composition.
- Alleles can increase their frequency rapidly
- You expect that advantageous alleles will quickly go to fixation
- However, random fluctuations (genetic drift) may counteract selection, especially when selection is weak
- Potential for accelerated evolutionary change (adaptive or non-adaptive) in small populations
What is Fst?
Fst is a measure for genetic distance.
What is it meant for isolation-by distance? Why is it a good model on human genetic variation?
Genetic distance arises by neutral evolution and is counteracted by dispersal and migration.
Physical distance = genetic distance
Why the distribution of skin color can’t be explain only by IBD?
- Dark skin protects against damaging effects of UV radiation
- Dark skin protects against degradation of folic acid
- Light skin promotes synthesis of vitamin D, preventing rickets (“English disease”)?
- Light skin is promoted by sexual selection?
- In the end: dark skin colour is more advantageous in tropical climates, but less important at higher latitudes