Topic 8a - Evolution & Evolutionary Mechanisms Flashcards
Four postulates of Darwin & Wallace that lead to natural selection & evolutionary change are?
- Variation exists among members of a population
- At least some of this variation is due to possession of heritable traits
- Reproductive success varies w/ individuals
- The survival & reproductive success depends at least in part on heritable characteristics
Define evolution. Give examples
descent of modern organisms, with mutation, from preexisting life forms.
All organisms are related by common ancestry & have changed over time.
Any change in genetic makeup from one generation to the next.
E.g. artificial selection by humans, pesticide resistance, natural selection, industrial melanism (peppered moth)
Define natural selection
the unequal survival & reproduction of organisms with differing phenotypes, caused by environmental forces.
“Survival of the fittest”
Evidence of evolution is shown by…?
Fossil record
Comparative anatomy
comparative embryology
genetic/biochemical similarity
Comparative anatomy involves?
homologous structures
vestigial structures
analogous structures
Homologous Structures have…?
a common origin, but may serve different functions
Vestigial structures have…?
no current function in existing form; had function in ancestral form
Analogous structures have..?
no evolutionary relationship, but serve similar functions
Define gene pool
all of the alleles that code for a particular gene product in a given population
Define allele frequency
the occurrence (on a percentage basis) of a particular allele in a gene pool
What is the Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium?
No change in allele frequency will occur if:
- mutation does not occur
- no gene flow exists
- population is very large
- mating is random
- natural selection does not occur
ONE OF THESE ALWAYS OCCURS!
Define gene flow
the movement of alleles from one population to another owing to the migration of individual organisms
Mutations are required for…?
evolutionary change. think genetic variation => e.g. antibiotic resistant bacteria
What is genetic drift? What effects does this have on population?
A shift in genetic frequencies in small populations, results due to small proportion of pop. reproducing.
Genetic variability reduced, alleles are sometimes lost
Effects:
- founder effect
- population bottleneck
Explain founder effect
Only a few members of a population arrive at a new location to produce a new population.
Consult lecture diagram