Micro Evolution
Micro Evolution
Micro Evolution
Recessive alleles may not come under selective pressure, as they are not expresses in heterozygotes passed down and preserved in gene pool.
Heterozygotes at a particular locus may have greater survivability than homozygotes. E.g. Sicke-cell allele carriers resistance to Malaria
The commonality of a phenotype is detrimental to its fitness the rare phenotypes enjoy greater differential reproductive success. E.g. Predators consume the most common type of prey; hence the rare phenotypes survive and pass on their rare alleles.
Variations in non-coding DNA are neutral, and variations in coding DNA are neutral due to the degeneracy of DNA code. Neutral Variations do not come under selection pressure, thus are preserved.
Occurs when a new colony forms from a few members from an original population. As members are few, the colony has a reduced genetic variation from the original population.
Occurs when a population is drastically reduced in size by chance events. Subsequently, the reduced gene pool will have a reduced variety of alleles, with some being overrepresented, some underrepresented, and many absent.
6.121 Distinguish between the bottleneck effect and the founder effect.
The bottleneck effect takes place when a catastrophic event greatly reduces population size without prejudice. It is possible, by chance, that the surviving members do not accurately represent their previous allele frequencies. The founder effect is similar, but takes place not through mass death, but when a small group becomes isolated from the rest and forms a new population. It is just as likely that these isolated individuals will not represent the previous allele
The smaller the population size, the faster the decline in heterozygosity. This decline in heterozygosity is due to the increase in frequency of one of the alleles, which approaches fixation.
6.2 Non-Random Mating Occurrence of sexual selection affects which alleles are passed on.
6.3 Gene Flow Migration of individuals between populations reduces genetic differences between populations.
6.4 Artificial Selection The selection of particular phenotypes as a result of environmental pressures deliberately imposed by Man. It is deliberate and intentional!
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Examples: The domestication of plants (Corn, wheat and rice), livestock and pets
Features Selection Pressure by Selection of parents Intensity of selection Reproductive Fitness of selected individuals Variation
Natural Selection Environment Chance May not be intensive, unless change is sudden Increases Does not decrease, due to mechanisms in nature Unknown
Artificial Selection Man Deliberate Usually intensive Decreases, due to interbreeding Decreases, as undesirable traits are removed from gene pool Known
Identity of selected
individual
Selection pressure is against individuals at both ends of the phenotypic distribution and favours the intermediates. Number of individuals showing the mean phenotype increases. Requirement: Environment needs to be stable over a period of time to allow a common phenotype to rise E.g. the mortality of rates of infants whose weight are higher or lower than 34kg are highest, hence the average weight of babies are 3-4 kg.
Selection pressure is against individuals at one end of the distribution Occurs when environmental pressures progressively changes in one way
Selection pressure is against individuals in the intermediate range of phenotypes, and favours the individuals at the extreme ends. Occurs during a drastic change of environmental factors. Two sub-species are created. E.g. When a new predator enters a lake, the smaller fish can escape and the larger ones can defend itself, leaving the medium sized ones as prey.
8.2 Heterozygote Superiority of sickle cell carriers. Sickle cell anaemia is the result of the mutant autosomal recessive haemoglobin gene. Homozygote recessive individuals always die from anaemia and are susceptible to malaria. However, in heterozygotes the recessive allele protects the individuals from malaria. Hence, in malaria infested areas the heterozygotes are selected for and have greater reproductive success than both homozygotes. Hence, the frequency of the recessive allele increases in the gene pool.
8.3 The Finches of the Galapagos Islands. Originally, one species of Finch migrated to the Galapagos from America. The ancestral finch was ground dwelling and seed eating. When the birds colonized the islands, the various ecological niches exerted different selection pressures on the populations, causing the populations to evolve in different ways. Over several generations, the beaks on the different finch populations became adapted for different diets; seeds, insects, flowers and leaves on various islands. Eventually, the populations evolved into 14 different species, each with its own song, food preferences and beak shapes. This is an example of Adaptive RadiationThe evolutionary diversification of a single ancestral form into a variety, each adapted to particular ecological niches.