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MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular area and reproducing with one another.
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MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

Dec 19, 2015

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Robyn Hawkins
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Page 1: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY

CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION.

A population is defined as all the members of a

single species occupying a particular area and reproducing with one

another.

Page 2: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

The members of a population vary

from one another.

Variation is the raw material

for evolutionary change.

Page 3: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

WHAT CAUSES VARIATIONS?

1. MUTATIONS2. CROSSING OVER3. INDEPENDENT ASSORTMENT4. RANDOM FERTILIZATION

Mutations are the only way to introduce new traits/alleles into a population

Page 4: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

Godfrey Hardy and Wilhelm Weinberg created a principle that explains the

conditions necessary for

evolution NOT to take place in a

population.

Page 5: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

HARDY-WEINBERG PRINCIPLE

When allele frequencies remain constant, a population is in genetic equilibrium.

If you don’t add or subtract traits that exist in a population, then the population won’t evolve (change)

THE PRINCIPLE TRANSLATION

Page 6: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

HARDY-WEINBERG EQUILIBRIUM IS MAINTAINED IN A POPULATION IF FIVE CONDITIONS ARE MET. THIS

MEANS THAT EVOLUTION WILL NOT HAPPEN.

1. No mutations 2. No gene flow (migration of

alleles in or out of the population)

3. Random mating must occur4. No genetic drift5. No natural selection

Page 7: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

These conditions are rarely if ever met in the real world. Thus allele frequencies continually change and microevolution occurs.

The value of the Hardy-Weinberg principle is that it describes the factors that cause evolution.

Page 8: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

THEREFORE FOR EVOLUTION TO TAKE PLACE, THE FOLLOWING HAS TO HAPPEN.

1. Mutations2. Gene flow3. Genetic drift4. Nonrandom mating5. Natural selection

Page 9: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

1. MUTATIONS WILL OCCUR FOR EVOLUTION TO TAKE PLACE.

Mutations are the raw material of evolutionary change. (alteration in the DNA nucleotide sequence of an allele)

Mutation introduces new variation into a population. They can be harmful or beneficial.

Page 10: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

2. GENE FLOW WILL OCCUR FOR EVOLUTION TO TAKE

PLACE.

Gene flow, or gene migration, occurs when breeding members of a population leave a population or new members enter.

Gene migration can introduce new alleles to populations. When new individuals enter an existing population, they also introduce all of their genetic material (DNA, traits, etc…).

Page 11: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

3. GENETIC DRIFT WILL OCCUR FOR EVOLUTION TO TAKE

PLACE.

Chance events that cause the allele frequency to change is called genetic drift.

Page 12: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

AN EXAMPLE OF GENETIC DRIFT IS THE BOTTLENECK EFFECT.A bottleneck occurs when an event reduces the number of organisms in a population.

The variation in that population is reduced, changing the allele frequencies within the population.

Page 13: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

Bottleneck effect is caused by a severe reduction in population size due to natural disaster, predation, or habitat reduction.

Bottleneck effect causes severe reduction in total genetic diversity of the original gene pool.

The cheetah bottleneck causes relative infertility because of the intense interbreeding when populations were reduced in earlier times.

Page 14: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

THE FOUNDER EFFECT IS ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF

GENETIC DRIFT.

The founder effect occurs when combinations of alleles occur at a higher frequency in a population that has been isolated from a larger population.

This is due to founding individuals containing a fraction of total genetic diversity of original population. Which particular alleles are carried by the founders is dictated by chance alone.

Page 15: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

Genetically inherited diseases like Ellis-van Creveld are more concentrated among the Amish because they marry within their own community, which prevents new genetic variation from entering the population.

Page 16: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

4. NONRANDOM MATING MUST OCCUR FOR EVOLUTION TO TAKE

PLACE.

When males and females reproduce together strictly by chance it is called random mating.

Any behavioral activity that fosters the selection of specific mates is nonrandom mating.

Page 17: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

5. NATURAL SELECTION MUST OCCUR FOR EVOLUTION TO TAKE

PLACE.

Natural selection is the process that adapts populations to the environment.

Operates to select certain phenotypes, which are passed to different generations.

Page 18: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

THREE TYPES OF SELECTION ARE:

1. DIRECTIONAL SELECTION

2. STABILIZING SELECTION

3. DISRUPTIVE SELECTION

Page 19: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

DIRECTIONAL SELECTIONWhen one extreme

phenotype is favored by natural selection, the distribution of the phenotype shifts in that direction.

This type of selection is therefore called directional selection.

Page 20: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

STABILIZING SELECTION

• Stabilizing selection occurs when the intermediate phenotype is favored.

Page 21: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

DISRUPTIVE SELECTION In disruptive selection,

natural selection acts upon both extremes of the phenotype. This creates a increasing division within the population which may ultimately lead to two different phenotypes.

Disruptive selection is the process that leads to speciation (creation of a new species).

Page 22: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

DIRECTIONAL DISRUPTIVE STABILIZING

Page 23: MICROEVOLUTION INVOLVES THE EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES WITHIN A POPULATION. A population is defined as all the members of a single species occupying a particular.

MAINTENANCE OF VARIATIONS

The preservation of variation in a population is important because it provides a foundation on which natural selection can act.

Variation is preserved by a variety of mentioned processes.Mutations and genetic recombinationGene flowNatural selection