What is microevolution?
A chance in allele frequency in a population or species across generations
Focus is on variatino within populations/species and evolutionary change over shorter time periods
What is macroevolution?
Evolution above the species level; variation among species and on questions releated to diversification (origin of new species and higher order groups) acorss relatively long periods of time
The result of microevolution writ large (longer term and higher taxonomic consequences)
What does microevolution requires? What are the processes that can cause microevolution (4) ?
Microevolution requires genetic variation (more than one allele segregating at a locus in a population)
Processes that can cause microevolution; mutation, gene flow, genetic drift, natural selection
What is random mating?
In a population is also called panmixia - where some species can be panmictic
Ex. Different eel species migrate to a large lake to mate with other eel species and random mating occurs, then the eels migrate back to their original lakes
What is non-random mating?
Affects how alleles are organized into genotypes (alters genotype frequencies of homozygosity and heterozygosity)
under the assumption that all individuals still mate (≠ sexual selection), allele frequencies are not affected ∴ it is not a mechanism of evolution on its own
(if one indiv. mates with others more compared to another that does not mate at all)
Why is mating often non-random?
What is the difference between positive and negative assortative mating?
Positive = similar in phenotype
Negative = differs in phenotype
What is inbreeding ? What does this cause ?
When mating takes place between related indivs and the resulting offspring are inbred
Causes an increase in the frequency of homozygotes across the genome (at all loci) and a deviation from the HW expected genotype frequencies
What are the effects of inbreeding?
Effects can be ephemeral; one or a few generations of random mating can restore the HW expected genotype frequencies
What is an inbreeding depression?
The increase in homozygosity as a result of inbreeding tends to decrease fitness
Inbreeding depression = the decrease in fitness
What are some Mendelian causes of inbreeding depressions?
1) Dominance hypothesis;
2) Heterozygote advantage;
How have plants/animals evolved traits allowing for inbreeding avoidance?
How have hermaphrodites/monoecious species evolved traits allowing for inbreeding avoidance?
What is outbreeding? What are the results of it?
The mating between indivs that are less related than would be expected by random mating within the population
Tends to increase heterozygosity, a common outcome is an increase in fitness relative to non-outbred indivs (heterosis/hybrid vigour)
What is a mutation? What are some important characteristics?
Mutation = change in the genetic info (nuceotide sequence) of an organisms DNA
What are two main types of mutation?
Small scale (point mutation);
Substitution = when a single nucleotide is replaced with another
Insertion/deletion = one or more nucelotides are added/removed
Large scale; mutations in chromosomal structure (translocations, inversions, chromosomal loss, duplications)
What are some impacts of mutation?
What is gene flow?
AKA migration
The movement of alleles between populations
What is local adaptation?
Occurs when a population adapts to its local environment; populations inhabiting different local environments may therefore diverge due to the differences in the selection they each experience
What effect does gene flow have on local adaptation?
Gene flow can hinder local adaptation by constantly introducing maladaptive alleles from other populations (outbreeding depression = reduced fitness from matings between populations)
What is genetic drift?
Occurs due to sampling variation = the difference between the value in a finite sample compared to the true value of a population
What are the effects of genetic drift?
What are population bottlenecks?
A severe (generally rapid) decrease in population size which reduces genetic variation and enhances genetic drift
What is Darwinian fitness?
The absolute contribution of an indiv to the next generation where its reproductive success is measured as the number of offspring it produces