natural selection
artificial selection
types of selection
disruptive, stabilizing, directional
disruptive selection
selection for two extreme phenotypes and against intermediate phenotype
stabilizing selection
selection for intermediate phenotype and against two extreme phenotypes
directional selection
selection for AN extreme phenotype and against all other phenotypes
five conditions of h-w equilibrium
genetic drift
founder’s effect
small population is isolated from original population, causing certain alleles to be over/underrepresented
bottleneck effect
population is reduced by natural disaster - no selection based on traits (certain alleles can be over/underrepresented)
h-w equilibrium: “p”
frequency of dominant allele; 2AA + Aa/2 x # individuals
h-w equilibrium: “q”
frequency of recessive allele; 2aa + Aa/2 x # individuals
h-w equilibrium: “p^2”
frequency of homozygous dominant; #AA/total
h-w equilibrium: “2pq”
frequency of heterozygous; #Aa/total
h-w equilibrium: “q^2”
frequency of homozygous recessive; #aa/total
did the population evolve?
if allele/phenotype frequency has changed, the population has evolved
biochemical evidence of evolution
DNA or protein; comparison of number of differences
morphological evidence of evolution
homologous structures, ancestral/derived traits
homologous structures (homology)
similar structures due to common ancestry
ancestral/derived traits
traits derived from ancestor or from descendants
analogous structures
similar structures due to convergent evolution
types of prezygotic isolation
behavioral, temporal, geographic, habitat/ecological, mechanical, gametic
types of postzygotic isolation
reduced hybrid viability, reduced hybrid fertility, hybrid breakdown
hybrid breakdown
hybrid becomes less and less viable and fertile with each generation