what is the gene pool?
represents the sum total of alleles for all genes present in a sexually reproducing population
what does a large gene pool indicate?
high amounts of genetic diversity, increasing the chances of biological fitness and survival
what does a small gene pool indicate?
low amounts of genetic diversity, reducing biological fitness and increasing chances of extinction
what can gene pools be used to determine?
allele frequency (the proportion of a particular allele within a population)
what is evolution?
the cumulative change in the heritable characteristics of a population across successive generations
what is required for evolution to occur?
allele frequencies change within the gene pool of the population
what are the 5 mechanisms of change?
what is genetic drift?
the change in the composition of a gene pool as a result of change or random events
what is the difference in genetic drift between smaller and large populations?
what are 2 mechanisms by which small populations may change?
population bottlenecks and founder effect
when do bottlenecks occur?
when an event reduces population size by order of magnitude (- >50%)
what is a bottleneck? (2)
when does founder effect occur?
small group breaks away from a larger population breaks away from a larger population to colonise a new territory
what is the founder effect? (2)
what do allele frequencies represent?
the prevalence of a particular allele in a population, as a proportion of all alleles for that gene
what can changes in allele frequency reflect?
random process (genetic drift)
differential process (natural selection)
what is the difference between the founder effect and population bottlenecks?
original populations remains largely intact
what is natural selection?
change in the composition of a gene pool in response to a differentially selective environmental pressure
what is stabilising selection? (2)
when does stabilising selection occur?
when environmental conditions are stable and competition is low
what is an example of stabilising selection?
human birth weights
(too large = birthing complications)
(too small = rick of infant mortality)
what is directional selection?
what typically occurs after directional selection?
will typically be followed by stabilising selection once optimal phenotype has been normalised
what is an example of directional selection?
antibiotic resistance in bacterial populations