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DAY 3 1
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DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes. The principles of today’s.

Jan 29, 2016

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Herbert Murphy
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Page 1: DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution  Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes.  The principles of today’s.

DAY 3

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Page 2: DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution  Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes.  The principles of today’s.

Population Genetics and Evolution Darwin developed his theory of natural

selection without knowing about genes. The principles of today’s modern theory

are rooted in population genetics and other related fields of study and are expressed in genetic terms.

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Page 3: DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution  Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes.  The principles of today’s.

Populations, not individuals, evolve Can an organism respond to natural

selection by acquiring or losing characteristics?

Recall that genes determine most features Within its lifetime, an individual cannot evolve

to a new phenotype by natural selection in response to its environment

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Page 4: DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution  Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes.  The principles of today’s.

Natural selection acts on the range of pheontypes in a population.

Each member of a population has the genes that characterize the traits of the species (as pairs of alleles).

All of the genes of the population’s individuals make up the population’s genes

Evolution occurs as a population’s genes and their frequencies change over time.

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Page 5: DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution  Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes.  The principles of today’s.

How? Gene pool – picture all of the alleles of the

population’s genes as being together in a large pool.

The percentage of any specific allele in the gene pool is called the allelic frequency. Scientists calculate the allelic frequency of an allele in the same way that a baseball player calculates a batting average.

Genetic Equilibrium - a population in which the frequency of alleles remains the same over generations.

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Page 6: DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution  Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes.  The principles of today’s.

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Page 7: DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution  Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes.  The principles of today’s.

Changes in Genetic Equilibrium A population that is in genetic equilibrium is not

evolving. If allelic frequencies remain the same, so do phenotypes.

Changes in genetic equilibrium result in evolution. Mutations Genetic drift – the alteration of allelic frequencies by

chance events. Can greatly affect small populations Life in the Galapagos Islands

Gene flow – the transport of genes by migrating individuals. When an individual leaves a population, its genes are lost

from the gene pool.

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Page 8: DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution  Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes.  The principles of today’s.

Natural Selection acts on Variation Recall that some variations increase or

decrease an organism’s chance of survival in an environment. These variations can be inherited and are controlled by alleles. There are three different types of natural selection that act on variation: stabilizing, directional, and disruptive.

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Page 9: DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution  Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes.  The principles of today’s.

Stabilizing Selection

favours individuals with an “average” value for a trait, and selects against those with extreme values. Human birth weight is an example. Until recent medical advance, infants that were too small tended not to survive and infants that were too large died during birth.

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Page 10: DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution  Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes.  The principles of today’s.

Stabilizing selection10

Page 11: DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution  Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes.  The principles of today’s.

Directional Selection

favours individuals possessing values for a trait at one extreme of the distribution, and selects against the average and other extreme.

The development of antibiotic resistant bacteria is an example of directional selection. Only those bacteria that can tolerate the presence of an antibiotic survive.

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Page 12: DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution  Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes.  The principles of today’s.

Directional Selection12

Page 13: DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution  Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes.  The principles of today’s.

Disruptive Selection

favours individuals at both ends of the distribution and selects against the average.

It is also known as diversifying selection.

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Page 14: DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution  Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes.  The principles of today’s.

Disruptive Selection14

Page 15: DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution  Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes.  The principles of today’s.

Natural vs. Artificial Selection Both are mechanisms of change in the

gene pool of a population In artificial selection - humans ensure

individuals with the more desirable traits are allowed to reproduce

In natural selection, those individuals who are best suited to their environment survive and reproduce.

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Page 16: DAY 3 1. Population Genetics and Evolution  Darwin developed his theory of natural selection without knowing about genes.  The principles of today’s.

Natural Selection in a Candy Dish Yummy!

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