1.6

75
AIM: What are the overall factors causing evolution? Warm-up: Briefly describe 2 mechanisms that could account for speciation.

Transcript of 1.6

Page 1: 1.6

AIM: What are the overall factors causing evolution?

Warm-up: Briefly describe 2 mechanisms that could

account for speciation.

Page 2: 1.6

5 Agents of evolutionary change

Page 3: 1.6

5 Agents of evolutionary changeMutation

Page 4: 1.6

5 Agents of evolutionary changeMutation Gene Flow

Page 5: 1.6

5 Agents of evolutionary changeMutation Gene Flow Non-random mating

Page 6: 1.6

5 Agents of evolutionary changeMutation Gene Flow

Genetic Drift

Non-random mating

Page 7: 1.6

5 Agents of evolutionary changeMutation Gene Flow

Genetic Drift Selection

Non-random mating

Page 8: 1.6

1. Mutation & Variation

Page 9: 1.6

1. Mutation & Variation

Page 10: 1.6

1. Mutation & Variation

§Mutation creates variation

Page 11: 1.6

1. Mutation & Variation

§Mutation creates variationu new mutations are constantly appearing

Page 12: 1.6

1. Mutation & Variation

§Mutation creates variationu new mutations are constantly appearing

§Mutation changes DNA sequence

Page 13: 1.6

1. Mutation & Variation

§Mutation creates variationu new mutations are constantly appearing

§Mutation changes DNA sequenceu changes amino acid sequence

Page 14: 1.6

1. Mutation & Variation

§Mutation creates variationu new mutations are constantly appearing

§Mutation changes DNA sequenceu changes amino acid sequenceu changes protein

Page 15: 1.6

1. Mutation & Variation

§Mutation creates variationu new mutations are constantly appearing

§Mutation changes DNA sequenceu changes amino acid sequenceu changes proteinu changes in protein may

change phenotype & therefore change fitness

Page 16: 1.6

2. Gene Flow

Page 17: 1.6

2. Gene Flow

Page 18: 1.6

2. Gene Flow

§Movement of individuals & alleles in & out of populations

Page 19: 1.6

2. Gene Flow

§Movement of individuals & alleles in & out of populationsu seed & pollen distribution by

wind & insect

Page 20: 1.6

2. Gene Flow

§Movement of individuals & alleles in & out of populationsu seed & pollen distribution by

wind & insectu migration of animals

Page 21: 1.6

2. Gene Flow

§Movement of individuals & alleles in & out of populationsu seed & pollen distribution by

wind & insectu migration of animals§ sub-populations may have

different allele frequencies

Page 22: 1.6

2. Gene Flow

§Movement of individuals & alleles in & out of populationsu seed & pollen distribution by

wind & insectu migration of animals§ sub-populations may have

different allele frequencies

§ causes genetic mixing across regions

Page 23: 1.6

2. Gene Flow

§Movement of individuals & alleles in & out of populationsu seed & pollen distribution by

wind & insectu migration of animals§ sub-populations may have

different allele frequencies

§ causes genetic mixing across regions

§ reduce differences between populations

Page 24: 1.6

Human evolution today§ Gene flow in human

populations is increasing todayu transferring alleles

between populations

Page 25: 1.6

Human evolution today§ Gene flow in human

populations is increasing todayu transferring alleles

between populations

Page 26: 1.6

Human evolution today§ Gene flow in human

populations is increasing todayu transferring alleles

between populations

Are we moving towards a blended world?

Page 27: 1.6

3. Non-random mating

§ Sexual selection

Page 28: 1.6

3. Non-random mating

§ Sexual selection

Page 29: 1.6

4. Genetic drift

Page 30: 1.6

4. Genetic drift

Page 31: 1.6

4. Genetic drift

§ Effect of chance events

Page 32: 1.6

4. Genetic drift

§ Effect of chance eventsu founder effect

Page 33: 1.6

4. Genetic drift

§ Effect of chance eventsu founder effect§ small group splinters off & starts a new colony

Page 34: 1.6

Warbler

finch

Tree

finc

hes

Ground finches

4. Genetic drift

§ Effect of chance eventsu founder effect§ small group splinters off & starts a new colony

Page 35: 1.6

Warbler

finch

Tree

finc

hes

Ground finches

4. Genetic drift

§ Effect of chance eventsu founder effect§ small group splinters off & starts a new colony

u bottleneck

Page 36: 1.6

Warbler

finch

Tree

finc

hes

Ground finches

4. Genetic drift

§ Effect of chance eventsu founder effect§ small group splinters off & starts a new colony

u bottleneck § some factor (disaster) reduces population to

small number & then population recovers & expands again

Page 37: 1.6

Warbler

finch

Tree

finc

hes

Ground finches

4. Genetic drift

§ Effect of chance eventsu founder effect§ small group splinters off & starts a new colony

u bottleneck § some factor (disaster) reduces population to

small number & then population recovers & expands again

Page 38: 1.6

Founder effect

Page 39: 1.6

Founder effect

§When a new population is started by only a few individualsu some rare alleles may be at high

frequency; others may be missing

u skew the gene pool of new population§ human populations that

started from small group of colonists

§ example: colonization of New World

Page 40: 1.6

Distribution of blood types§ Distribution of the O type blood allele in native

populations of the world reflects original settlement

Page 41: 1.6

Distribution of blood types§ Distribution of the O type blood allele in native

populations of the world reflects original settlement

Page 42: 1.6

Distribution of blood types§ Distribution of the O type blood allele in native

populations of the world reflects original settlement

Page 43: 1.6

Distribution of blood types§ Distribution of the B type blood allele in native

populations of the world reflects original migration

Page 44: 1.6

Distribution of blood types§ Distribution of the B type blood allele in native

populations of the world reflects original migration

Page 45: 1.6

Distribution of blood types§ Distribution of the B type blood allele in native

populations of the world reflects original migration

Page 46: 1.6

Distribution of blood types§ Distribution of the B type blood allele in native

populations of the world reflects original migration

Page 47: 1.6

Bottleneck effect

Page 48: 1.6

Bottleneck effect

§When large population is drastically reduced by a disaster

Page 49: 1.6

Bottleneck effect

§When large population is drastically reduced by a disasteru famine, natural disaster, loss of habitat…

Page 50: 1.6

Bottleneck effect

§When large population is drastically reduced by a disasteru famine, natural disaster, loss of habitat…u loss of variation by chance event

Page 51: 1.6

Bottleneck effect

§When large population is drastically reduced by a disasteru famine, natural disaster, loss of habitat…u loss of variation by chance event§ alleles lost from gene pool

Page 52: 1.6

Bottleneck effect

§When large population is drastically reduced by a disasteru famine, natural disaster, loss of habitat…u loss of variation by chance event§ alleles lost from gene poolwnot due to fitness

Page 53: 1.6

Bottleneck effect

§When large population is drastically reduced by a disasteru famine, natural disaster, loss of habitat…u loss of variation by chance event§ alleles lost from gene poolwnot due to fitness

§ narrows the gene pool

Page 54: 1.6

Cheetahs

Page 55: 1.6

Cheetahs

§ All cheetahs share a small number of alleles

Page 56: 1.6

Cheetahs

§ All cheetahs share a small number of allelesu less than 1% diversity

Page 57: 1.6

Cheetahs

§ All cheetahs share a small number of allelesu less than 1% diversityu as if all cheetahs are

identical twins

Page 58: 1.6

Cheetahs

§ All cheetahs share a small number of allelesu less than 1% diversityu as if all cheetahs are

identical twins

§ 2 bottlenecks

Page 59: 1.6

Cheetahs

§ All cheetahs share a small number of allelesu less than 1% diversityu as if all cheetahs are

identical twins

§ 2 bottlenecksu 10,000 years ago

Page 60: 1.6

Cheetahs

§ All cheetahs share a small number of allelesu less than 1% diversityu as if all cheetahs are

identical twins

§ 2 bottlenecksu 10,000 years ago§ Ice Age

Page 61: 1.6

Cheetahs

§ All cheetahs share a small number of allelesu less than 1% diversityu as if all cheetahs are

identical twins

§ 2 bottlenecksu 10,000 years ago§ Ice Age

u last 100 years

Page 62: 1.6

Cheetahs

§ All cheetahs share a small number of allelesu less than 1% diversityu as if all cheetahs are

identical twins

§ 2 bottlenecksu 10,000 years ago§ Ice Age

u last 100 years§ poaching & loss of habitat

Page 63: 1.6

Conservation issuesPeregrine Falcon

Golden Lion Tamarin

Page 64: 1.6

Conservation issues§ Bottlenecking is an important

concept in conservation biology of endangered species

Peregrine Falcon

Golden Lion Tamarin

Page 65: 1.6

Conservation issues§ Bottlenecking is an important

concept in conservation biology of endangered speciesu loss of alleles from gene pool

Peregrine Falcon

Golden Lion Tamarin

Page 66: 1.6

Conservation issues§ Bottlenecking is an important

concept in conservation biology of endangered speciesu loss of alleles from gene poolu reduces variation

Peregrine Falcon

Golden Lion Tamarin

Page 67: 1.6

Conservation issues§ Bottlenecking is an important

concept in conservation biology of endangered speciesu loss of alleles from gene poolu reduces variationu reduces adaptability

Breeding programs must consciously outcross

Peregrine Falcon

Golden Lion Tamarin

Page 68: 1.6

5. Natural selection

Page 69: 1.6

5. Natural selection

§ Differential survival & reproduction due to changing environmental conditions

Page 70: 1.6

5. Natural selection

§ Differential survival & reproduction due to changing environmental conditions

§ climate change

Page 71: 1.6

5. Natural selection

§ Differential survival & reproduction due to changing environmental conditions

§ climate change§ food source availability

Page 72: 1.6

5. Natural selection

§ Differential survival & reproduction due to changing environmental conditions

§ climate change§ food source availability

§ predators, parasites, diseases

Page 73: 1.6

5. Natural selection

§ Differential survival & reproduction due to changing environmental conditions

§ climate change§ food source availability

§ predators, parasites, diseases§ toxins

Page 74: 1.6

5. Natural selection

§ Differential survival & reproduction due to changing environmental conditions

§ climate change§ food source availability

§ predators, parasites, diseases§ toxins

u combinations of alleles that provide “fitness” increase in the population

Page 75: 1.6

5. Natural selection

§ Differential survival & reproduction due to changing environmental conditions

§ climate change§ food source availability

§ predators, parasites, diseases§ toxins

u combinations of alleles that provide “fitness” increase in the population§ adaptive evolutionary change