What is microevolution?
Microevolution is the change of allele frequencies of a population over generations.
What is a population?
A population is an interbreeding group of individuals that occupy a geographic area
What is a gene pool?
A gene pool is all the genes available for reproduction in a population
How do populations, evolution, and individuals relate?
A population evolves, not individuals. However, natural selection acts on the individual. Their death or reproduction affects the populations gene pool
What creates the genetic variation that makes evolution possible?
Sexual reproduction and mutations produce the genetic variation that makes evolution possible
- Most genetic variations are NOT due to mutations, but due to sexual recombination of alleles already in the population.
What is a morph?
A morph is two or more forms of a phenotypic characteristic in a population
What is a polymorphic characteristic?
A polymorphic characteristic is two or more phenotypes for a given trait in a population at noticeable levels. Allows for diversity or variation of a populations gene pool.
What is heterozygote advantage?
Heterozygote advantage occurs when the heterozygote has better fitness than a homozygote of either allele.
- Ex: Sickle cell heterozygote and decreased malaria fatality
What is Frequency-Dependent Selection?
Frequency-Dependent Selection: The survival and reproduction rates decline for a morph as it increases in phenotype frequency.
- Ex: As a butterfly color morph is rare, birds won’t know to target it, as it becomes more prominent, birds will selectively target it and it will give rise to different morphs to become prominent.
What is geographic variation?
Geographic variation occurs when the geography over a given area selects for different phenotypes or genotypes of similar or the same species.
What is an Ecocline (cline)?
An Ecocline, or cline for short, consists of forms of species that show gradual phenotypic and/or genetic differences over a geographical area.
- Rabbits with white fur in the snowy north and rabbits with brown fur in the drier south.
What is the Hardy-Weinberg principle?
The Hardy-Weinberg principle states that the genotypes and allele frequency of a given population will remain constant from one generation to another, providing that only Mendelian genetics and recombination of alleles operate.
What are the five Hardy-Weinberg conditions?
The five Hardy-Weinberg conditions are:
1) Large Population: Gene frequency doesn’t change as a result of chance alone
2) Random Mating: Inbreeding causes little mixing of genes
3) No Mutations: A mutation modifies our gene pool
4) No Natural Selection: Survival differences can alter gene frequencies
5) No Gene Flow: No immigration, no emigration, no pollen transfer (If a strong wind blew from point A to point B, pollen can transfer. We don’t want this. If a population had an influx of new members this would also be disrupted)
NB. No natural population meets these criteria, so any time a population deviates from this, they are inviting evolutionary change.
What are the Hardy-Weinberg Equations?
The Hardy-Weinberg Equations:
p + q = 1
p = frequency of dominant allele
q = frequency of recessive allele
p^2 + 2pq + q^2 = 1
p^2 = frequency of dominant homozygous genotype
2pq = frequency of heterozygous genotype
q^2 = frequency of recessive homozygous genotype
What three mechanisms operate to alter allele frequencies directly and cause the most evolutionary change?
The three mechanisms that cause the most evolutionary change to allele frequencies are:
What is genetic drift?
Genetic drift is the change to the alleles in a small population when certain alleles aren’t passed on due to the carriers dying off or not reproducing.
What is gene flow?
Gene flow is when alleles are carried by fertile individuals from one population to another.
What are founder effects?
Founder effects is a type of genetic drift. It occurs when a few members of a parent population migrate to a new area. The small gene pool interbreeds and genetic drift occurs
What is a bottleneck?
A bottleneck is a type of genetic drift. Some bad event occurs that significantly reduces the population. The small population may have some alleles that are over or underrepresentative of the original population, due to chance alone.
What is fitness?
Fitness is the contribution that an organism makes to the gene pool of the next generation.
What is Darwinian fitness?
In a population, it is the number of fertile offspring produced by an individual
What is stabilizing selection?
Stabilizing selection is when the alleles that produced uncommon phenotypes are eliminated over time.
What is directional selection?
Directional selection is when allele frequencies shift due to changing conditions in the environment
What is disruptive selection?
Disruptive selection occurs when individuals with either extreme variation of a trait have higher survivability than the intermediate.