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Evolution (Quiz Slides )

Jul 15, 2015

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Tauqeer Ahmad
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Page 1: Evolution (Quiz Slides )
Page 2: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

Chapter 23 Reading Quiz1. What is all of the genes in a population

called?2. In the Hardy-Weinberg equation, what

symbolizes the dominant allele?3. Name one way in which natural populations

do not fit Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.4. Any change in the allele frequencies of a

population is called _____.5. 10,000 years ago, cheetahs went through

what type of genetic drift?

Page 3: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

1. Very large population size2. Isolation from other populations (no

migration in or out of group)3. No net mutations4. Random mating5. No natural selection all genotypes

are equal in survival and reproductive success

Page 4: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

1. Explain what is meant by the “modern synthesis”.

Comprehensive theory integrating discoveries from different fields (paleontology, taxonomy, biogeography, and population genetics)

Emphasized the importance of populations as units of evolution central role of natural selection as the primary mechanism of evolutionary change gradualism as the explanation of how large changes can result from an accumulation of small changes over long periods of time

Page 5: Evolution (Quiz Slides )
Page 6: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

2. Explain how microevolutionary change can affect a gene pool.

Gene pool the total aggregate of genes in a population at any one time

Microevolution small scale evolutionary change represented by a generational shift in a population’s relative allelic frequencies

Page 7: Evolution (Quiz Slides )
Page 8: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

3. In your own words, state the Hardy-Weinberg theorem.

The frequencies of alleles in the gene pool will remain constant unless acted upon by other agents

Describes the genetic structure of non-evolving populations

Page 9: Evolution (Quiz Slides )
Page 10: Evolution (Quiz Slides )
Page 11: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

4. Write the general Hardy-Weinberg equation and use it to calculate allele and genotype frequencies.

P2 + 2pq + q2 = 1

The sum of frequencies must = 100% (p + q = 1)

When 2 alleles exist, only the frequency of one must be known since the other is derived 1 – p = q OR 1 – q = p

Page 12: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

#4 exampleEx: One individual in every ten thousand has ‘phenylketonuria’, a

deficiency which does not allow the body to process the amino acid phenylalanine. What percent of the population are carriers for this recessive disease?

1 in 10, 000 ; recessive = q2 ; q2 = .0001 ; q = .01

p = 1 – q ; p = 1 - .01 ; p = .99

p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1 ; 2pq = 2(.99)(.01) = .0198

therefore: 2% of the population are carriers for phenylketonuria

Page 13: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

More examples…1. .01% of the Caucasian population has

cystic fibrosis. In a sample population of 100,000 white people, how many would be expected to carry the disease?

Page 14: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

About 1 in 17,000 kids in the UK are born with albinism. This is a recessive disorder. On average, what % of the population would be carriers for albinism?

Page 15: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

In humans, Huntington’s disease is lethal in utero if both dominant alleles are inherited. The disease, however, is dominant. Therefore, for an individual to inherit the disease, they must be heterozygous for the condition. 7 in 100,000 people have Huntington’s. What are the dominant and recessive frequencies for this disorder? How many people in the 100,000 would be recessive for this condition?

Page 16: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

5. Explain the consequences of Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.

It provides a baseline from which evolutionary departures take place

It provides a reference point with which to compare the frequencies of alleles and genotypes of natural populations whose gene pools may be changing

Page 17: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

6. Demonstrate, with a simple example, that a disequilibrium population requires only one generation of random mating to establish Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.

Continued sexual reproduction with segregation, recombination, and random mating would not alter the frequencies of alleles and the gene pool would be in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium

If the gene pool was originally in disequilibrium, only one generation would be necessary for equilibrium to be established (as long as random mating is occurring in the population)

Page 18: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

7. List the conditions a population must meet in order to maintain Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.

1. Very large population size2. Isolation from other populations (no

migration in or out of group)3. No net mutations4. Random mating5. No natural selection all genotypes are

equal in survival and reproductive success

Page 19: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

8. Explain how genetic drift, gene flow, mutation, nonrandom mating and natural selection can cause microevolution.

These all cause microevolution because each of these conditions is a deviation from the criteria for Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium

Page 20: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

Genetic Drift

Page 21: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

9. Explain the role of population size in genetic drift.

Genetic drift changes in the gene pool of a small population due to chance if a population is small, its existing gene pool may not be accurately represented in the next generation due to sampling error chance events may cause the frequencies of alleles to drift randomly from generation to generation

Page 22: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

10. Distinguish between the bottleneck effect and the founder effect.

Bottleneck genetic drift which results from drastic reduction in population size- reduces overall genetic variability in a population since some alleles may be gone

Founder when a few individuals colonize a new habitat and genetic drift occurs- inherited diseases are obvious examples

Page 23: Evolution (Quiz Slides )
Page 24: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

11. Explain why mutation has little quantitative effect on a large population.

Mutation itself has little quantitative effect on large populations in a single generation since mutation at any given locus is very rare

Page 25: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

12. Describe how inbreeding and assortative mating affect a population’s allele frequencies and genotype frequencies.

Inbreeding results in relative genotypic frequencies that deviate from the frequencies predicted for Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, but does not alter frequencies of alleles (p & q) in the gene pool

Assortative mating type of nonrandom mating which results when individuals mate with partners that are like themselves in certain phenotypic charactersex: toads commonly mate with those of the same sizeex: snow geese (blue with blue, white with white)

- results in less heterozygotes than Hardy-Weinberg predicts

Page 26: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

13. Explain, in your own words, what is meant by the statement that natural selection is the only agent of microevolution which is adaptive.

It is the only agent which is adaptive, since it accumulates and maintains favorable genotypes environmental change would result in selection favoring genotypes present in the population which can survive the new conditions variability in the population makes it possible for natural selection to occur

Page 27: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

14. Describe the technique of electrophoresis and explain how it has been used to measure genetic variation within and between populations.

The technique allows researchers to identify variations in protein products of specific gene loci

Within the Drosophila population gene pool has 2 or more alleles for about 30% of the loci examined – bottom line: any two flies will differ in genotype at about 25% of their loci

Between geographical variation in allele frequencies exists among populations of most species – due to natural selection, genetic drift, localized inbreeding

Page 28: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

15. List some factors that can produce geographical variation among closely related populations.

1. Natural selection: environmental factors differ among locals

2. Genetic drift: causes chance variations among different populations

3. Localized inbreeding: subpopulations can appear resulting from a ‘patchy’ environment

4. Cline: one type of geographical variation that is a graded change in some trait along a geographic transect

Page 29: Evolution (Quiz Slides )
Page 30: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

16. Explain why even though mutation can be a source of genetic variability, it contributes a negligible amount to genetic variation in a population.

Mutations produce new alleles they are random and rare events which usually occur in somatic cells and are thus not inheritable- only mutations that occur in cell lines which will produce gametes can be passed to the next generation- estimate only 1 or 2 mutations occur in each human gamete-producing cell line

Page 31: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

17. Give the cause of nearly all genetic variation in a population.

Sexual recombination provides almost entirely the genetic variation which makes adaptation possible

Due to gametes vary extensively from crossing over and random segregation during meiosis

Page 32: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

18. Explain how genetic variation may be preserved in a natural population.

Diploidy hides much genetic variation from selection by the presence of recessive alleles in heterozygotes (not expressed and not selected against)

Balanced polymorphism the ability of natural selection to maintain diversity in a population

Heterozygote advantage have greater reproductive success (ex: sickle cell & anemia)

Page 33: Evolution (Quiz Slides )
Page 34: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

19. In your own words, briefly describe the neutral theory of molecular evolution and explain how changes in gene frequency may be nonadaptive.

It states that many variant alleles at a locus may confer no selective advantage or disadvantage variation in DNA which does not code for proteins may be nonadaptive

Page 35: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

20. Explain what is meant by “selfish” DNA.

Noncoding DNA has resulted from the inherent capacity for DNA to replicate itself and has expanded to the tolerance limits of each species

The entire genome could exist as a consequence of self-replication rather than providing an adaptive advantage to the organism - “selfish DNA”

Page 36: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

21. Explain the concept of relative fitness and its role in adaptive evolution.

Relative fitness the contribution of a genotype to the next generation compared to the contributions of alternative genotypes for the same locus every aspect of survival and fecundity (reproductive success) are components of fitness

Ex: pink flowers (AA & Aa) produce more offspring than white (aa), therefore AA & Aa genotypes have a higher relative fitness

Page 37: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

22. Explain why the rate of decline for a deleterious allele depends upon whether the allele is dominant or recessive to the more successful allele.

Deleterious recessives are normally protected from elimination by heterozygote protection

Selection against harmful dominant alleles is faster since they are expressed in heterozygotes

Page 38: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

23. Describe what selection acts on and what factors contribute to the overall fitness of a genotype.

Selection acts on phenotypes, indirectly adapting a population to its environment by increasing or maintaining favorable genotypes in the gene pool

An organism is an integrated composite of many phenotypic features and the fitness of a genotype at any one locus depends upon the entire genetic context

Page 39: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

24. Give examples of how an organism’s phenotype may be influenced by the environment.

physical traits, metabolism, physiology, and behavior are all exposed to the environment and may be selected upon

Page 40: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

25. Distinguish among stabilizing selection, directional selection and diversifying selection.

Stabilizing selection favors intermediate (average) variants by selecting against extreme phenotypes

Ex: spider size large spiders are more easily found by predators; small spiders have difficulty finding and getting food; average size spiders can hide and find food

Page 41: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

#25 continued… Directional selection favors variants of one

extreme – shifts frequency curve for phenotypic variations in one direction toward rare variants which deviate from the average

Ex: woodpecker beaks – the long beak is always selected over the average and short lengths

Page 42: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

#25 continued… Diversifying selection opposite phenotypic

extremes are favored over intermediate phenotypes Ex: limpets (shelled animals) in a tidal area that is

dark and light, with no in-between color- dark and light limpets are selected, not the intermediate colors

Page 43: Evolution (Quiz Slides )
Page 44: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

26. Define sexual dimorphism and explain how it can influence evolutionary change.

It is the distinction between the secondary sexual characteristics of males and females

Ex: size, plumage, lion manes, deer antlers, etc…

Separate selection process – - have no other adaptive advantage other than attracting mates- showier can contribute more to gene pool

Page 45: Evolution (Quiz Slides )
Page 46: Evolution (Quiz Slides )

27. Give at least four reasons why natural selection cannot breed perfect organisms.

1. Organisms are locked into historical constraints (descent with modification)

2. Adaptations are often compromises - must be versatile

3. Not all evolution is adaptive- genetic drift; alleles become fixed in small populations

4. Selection can only edit variations that exist - these variations may not represent ideal characteristics - new genes are not formed by mutation on demand