1 Evolution Chapters 22,23,24. 2 I. Theories of Evolution A. Early ideas pg. 453 fig. 22.1 B. Darwin...
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Transcript of 1 Evolution Chapters 22,23,24. 2 I. Theories of Evolution A. Early ideas pg. 453 fig. 22.1 B. Darwin...
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Evolution
Chapters 22,23,24
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I. Theories of Evolution
A. Early ideas pg. 453 fig. 22.1
B. Darwin & Wallace – Theory of Natural Selection
- a new species can arise from a gradual accumulation of adaptations
- environment can select most fit members to survive
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Darwin & Wallace (cont’d)
• Theory based on 3 premises
1. Organisms produce more individuals than environment can support – leads to struggle for existence
2. Survival depends on genetic make-up which allows adaptations to flourish
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Darwin & Wallace (cont’d)
3. Unequal ability to survive causes change in population
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II. Examples of Natural Selection
1. Artificial selection – breeding of animals
2. Insecticide use – DDT no longer used b/c 230 known species are unaffected by it Why?
gene pool changed
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Examples of Natural Selection (cont’d)
3. Penicillin – “miracle drug”
- used widely for strep throat
- bacteria w/ resistance survived
- now many other antibiotics are used
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Examples of Natural Selection (cont’d)
4. Peppered Moth
- two varieties on moths (dark & light)
- fed at night, rest in day
- before 1850 light were camouflaged on trees w/lichen(light) and dark were conspicuous
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Examples of Natural Selection (cont’d)
- frequency of light allele rose as they were favored & reproduced
- late 1800’s gene pool changed Why?
Industrial Revolution
soot caused lichens to die - light were conspicuous & dark were camouflaged
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Examples of Natural Selection (cont’d)
• Early 1800’s
95% AA, Aa (light)
5% aa (dark)
• Late 1800’s
10% AA, Aa
90% aa
• Recently light is coming back
- less pollution
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III. Types of Evolution
A. Divergent Evolution aka adaptive radiation
- organisms had a common descent ( same ancestors)
- organisms have homologous structures
- variations on a common theme
- arms, wings, flippers
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Types of Evolution (cont’d)
B. Convergent evolution
- organisms becoming more alike
- have analogous structures
- same function – different ancestry
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IV. Comparative Anatomy & Embryology
A. Vestigial organs – rudimentary organ
- little or no function
- historical remnants
- i.e. snake skeletons have vestigial pelvis & legs from walking ancestors
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B. Comparative embryology
1. Closely related organisms have similar embryonic development
2. Late 19th century theory
Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny
(embryonic development replays evolutionary history)
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3. More accurate – ontogeny provides clues to phylogeny
I.e. Gill slits become gills in fish or eustachian tubes in our ears.
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V. Hardy Weinberg Theorem
A. Theorem – an equation that provides a standard by which change can be measured
B. Compares a changing population to a theoretical unchanging one.
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C. Conditions that must be present so that change can’t
happen
1. No natural selection – all alleles are equally successful
2. No mutation
3. No gene flow in or out
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Hardy Weinberg Theorem (cont’d)
4. Must have large population so that the laws of probability will apply ( sm. Would be affected by chance)
5. Must have random mating – no selection of mate
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D. The above 5 results in a population with NO CHANGE
E. Equation
p = dominant allele (A)
q = recessive allele (a)
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• Aa x Aa same as pq x pq
• Set up Punnett Square
p q
p
qp2 pq
pq q2
Hardy Weinberg Theorem (cont’d)
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Hardy Weinberg Theorem (cont’d)
• p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1
• p + q = 1
• Can use this to calculate frequency of alleles or frequency of a particular phenotype.
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Hardy Weinberg Theorem (cont’d)
• Example fig. 23.7• In 1993 1/10,000 people had PKU, a genetic recessive
disorder aa - also q2
• Therefore q2 = 1/10,000 q2 = .0001• What is the frequency of the p allele?
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Hardy Weinberg Theorem (cont’d)
• q = .01
• p + q = 1
• p + .01 = 1
• p = 1 - .01
• p = .99
• Find the % heterozygotes in the population
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Hardy Weinberg Theorem (cont’d)
• 2pq = heterozygotes
• 2(.99)(.01) = .0198
• Round to .02
• .02 x 100 = 2%
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Hardy Weinberg Problems
• http://www.mac3.amatyc.org/anthropology/human_origins/Human_origins_edcc_HW.htm
• http://www.k-state.edu/parasitology/biology198/hardwein.html
• http://www.biosci.msu.edu/courses/bs110Lab/hardy/population_genetics.htm
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VI. Factors that can change a gene pool
• Opposite of Hardy Weinberg conditions
1. Natural selection occurs which leads to differences b/w populations
2. Mutations occur – raw material for variation
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Factors that can change a gene pool (cont’d)
3. Gene flow occurs which introduces new alleles and differences b/w populations
4. Genetic drift occurs – change in gene pool due to pure chance
- the smaller the sample the greater the chance for deviation from the expected
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Examples of genetic drift
1. Founder effect
- small sample of pop. breaks away & starts new colony
- Old world Amish people founded in 1770 w/ few members
- one member had extra fingers & dwarfism
- later generations had many cases reported
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Examples of genetic drift (cont’d)
2. Bottleneck effect
- when a disaster occurs that reduces the population drastically the remaining pop. is not a true representation of the original pop.
- i.e. Elephant seal hunt only left 20 seals
Are they a true representation of the original pop?
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Factors that can change a gene pool (cont’d)
5. Non random mating – organisms select a mate
I.e. Snow geese
- blue is dominant- white is recessive
- blue mates w/blue
- white mates w/ white
- heterozygotes died out
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VII. Types of Natural Selection
A. Stabilizing selection - favors the intermediate phenotype
- i.e. birth weight in humans
under 3 lbs. < 30% chance
over 10 lbs. < 50% chance
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Types of Natural Selection (cont’d)
B. Directional selection – favors one particular phenotype due to environmental change
- I.e.
- moth
- DDT
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Types of Natural Selection (cont’d)
C. Disruptive selection aka diversifying
– favors both extremes phenotypes
- I.e. Noxious butterflies
- Leads to balanced polymorphism
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What Is Balanced Polymorphism?
• Maintenance of diversity in a pop.
• Causes of bal. poly. morph.
- heterozygote advantage as in sickle cell anemia
- frequency dependent selection
- repro. success of a phenotype if it becomes too common
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Types of Natural Selection (cont’d)
D. Sexual Selection
- male competes for mate
- leads to sexual dimorphism ( distinction based on secondary sex charac.)
examples:
manes on male lion
antlers on deer
colorful males
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VIII. Origin of new species
A. Speciation – process of forming a new species
B. Causes
1. Allopatric - Geographic isolation
2. Sympatric - Reproductive isolation
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Allopatric Speciation
• Also called Geographic Isolation
• Results from geographic barriers like islands – Galapagos
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Sympatric speciation
• Results from reproductive barriers
• Less common than allopatric speciation
• Two main types
1. Prezygotic
2. Postzygotic
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Prezygotic
• Before fertilization• Temporal isolation – mating occurs at
different seasons • Behavioral isolation – no sexual attraction
b/w male & female• Mechanical isolation – genitals too different• Gamete isolation – egg & sperm
incompatible
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Postzygotic
• After fertilization
• Hybrid inviability – embryo forms but is never born
• Hybrid sterility – embryo survives but is sterile
• Hybrid breakdown – embryo survives & can reproduce but offspring is sterile
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