17.1 Genes and Variation 17.2 Evolution as Genetic Change in Populations Page 483.

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17.1 Genes and Variation 17.2 Evolution as Genetic Change in Populations Page 483

Transcript of 17.1 Genes and Variation 17.2 Evolution as Genetic Change in Populations Page 483.

Page 1: 17.1 Genes and Variation 17.2 Evolution as Genetic Change in Populations Page 483.

17.1 Genes and Variation17.2 Evolution as Genetic Change in

Populations

Page 483

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17.1 Big Idea• After Mendel’s work was rediscovered in

1910, genetics took off! Researchers discovered that heritable traits are controlled by genes that are carried on chromosomes.

• This fit perfectly into evolutionary theory. Variation is the raw material for natural selection.

• Now scientists could understand why variation occurs.

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Remember Genotype/Phenotype?• Some individuals have phenotypes that are

better suited to their environment than others. • Genetic Variations & Evolution are both studied

in populations.• Gene Pool: common group of genes and alleles

shared in a population. (Carpool means share)• Remember Alleles?• Relative Frequency: # of times an allele is in a

gene pool compared to total alleles in the gene pool. (Frequency means how often)

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Example

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Single Gene Traits

• The number of phenotypes produced for a trait depends on how many genes control the trait.

• Single- Gene Trait: Trait controlled by only 1 gene. (single means one)

• Example: snail shell bandsControlled by 1 gene 2 alleles• Page 485

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Polygenic Traits

• Polygenic Traits – controlled by 2 or more genes. (poly means many)

• Each gene has 2 or more alleles.• Example: Human Height• Pg 486

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17.2 Big Idea

• Evolutionary fitness is success in passing genes to the next generation.

• Evolutionary adaptation is any genetically controlled trait that increases an individual’s ability to pass along its alleles.

• Natural selection on single-gene traits can lead to changes in allele frequencies and thus to changes in phenotype frequencies.

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Initial Population Generation 10 Generation 20 Generation 30

90% 80% 70% 40%

10% 20% 30% 60%

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Natural Selection on Polygenic Traits

• Natural Selection on polygenic traits can affect the relative fitness of phenotypes and thereby produce one of 3 types of selection.

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Genetic Drift

• In small populations, individuals that carry a particular allele may leave more descendants that other individuals leave, just by chance.

• Over time, a series of chance occurrences can cause an allele to become more or less common in a population.

• Genetic Drift – Random change in allele frequency. (Drifting = random change)

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Drift• Bottleneck effect: a change in allele frequency

following a dramatic reduction in the population size. (bottle necks are reduced/small) ex: disease

• Founder effect: When allele frequencies change as a result of the migration of a small subgroup of a population. (Haven’t found way back, so new group somewhere else). EX fruit flies on islands

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Hardy-Wineberg Principle• Describes conditions under which evolution does

NOT occur. - Genetic Equilibrium• Hardy-Wineberg Principle: Allele frequencies in a

population remain constant unless 1 or more factors cause those frequencies to change. (it is hard for evolution to occur)

• 1. large population (drift on small pop.)• 2. No mutations• 3. Random Mating • 4. No immigration/emigration• 5. No natural selection (no advantages)

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Example of Equation• p2 + 2 pq + q2 = 1 Note: p+q=1

• P = A (frequency of dominate allele)• P2 = AA frequency of homozygous dominate• Q = a (Frequency of recessive allele) • q2 =aa (frequency of homo. Recessive)• 2PQ = Aa (frequency of heterozygous)