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1 Review Define genetic drift Relate Cause and Effect How can the founder effect
lead to changes in the allele pool2 Infer Genetic equilibrium is uncommon in actual
populations. Why do you think this is the case3 Evolution Do you think populations stay in genetic
equilibrium after the environment Has changed significantly- explain.
CH 17 EVOLUTION OF POPULATIONS17.2 Evolution as Genetic Change in Populations
Insect populations often contain a few individuals that are resistant to a particular pesticide
They pass on their resistance to their offspring and soon the pesticide-resistant offspring dominate the population.
Natural Selection on Single-Gene Traits
Lead to changes in allele frequencies and then to evolution
Mutation in one gene that determines body color in lizards can affect their lifespan
The normal color for lizards is brown, a mutation may produce red and black forms.
Red lizards are more visible to predators They are less likely to survive and reproduce = red
allele is rare.
Black lizards can absorb sunlight Higher body temperatures may allow the lizards to
move faster, escape predators, and reproduce.
Natural Selection on Polygenic Traits
The fitness of individuals may vary from one end of the curve to the other
Can affect the range of phenotypes and hence the shape of the bell curve.
Directional Selection
Individuals at one end of the curve have higher fitness than individuals in the middle or at the other end
Range of phenotypes shifts.
Stabilizing Selection
Individuals near the center of the curve have higher fitness than at either end
Keeps the center of the curve at its current position, but it narrows the overall graph.
Disruptive Selection
Individuals at the upper and lower ends of the curve have higher fitness than individuals near the middle
Acts against the intermediate type and can create two distinct phenotypes.
Genetic Drift
Random change in allele frequency.
Genetic Bottlenecks
Change in allele frequency following a dramatic reduction in the size of a population
A disaster may kill many individuals in a population, and the surviving population’s gene pool may contain different gene frequencies from the original gene pool.
The Founder Effect
Allele frequencies change as a result of the migration of a small subgroup of a population.
Genetic Equilibrium
Allele frequencies in the population remain the same
Evolution is not occurring.
Hardy-Weinberg Principle
All conditions that must occur for evolution not to occur
1. Very large population2. No mutations3. Random mating4. No migration 5. No natural selection.
Large Population
Genetic drift has less effect on large populations Large population size helps maintain genetic
equilibrium.
No Mutations
If mutations occur, new alleles may be introduced into the gene pool, and allele frequencies will change.
Random Mating
All members of the population must have an equal opportunity to produce offspring
Individuals must mate with other members of the population at random.
Random Mating
Non random mating examples Selective breeding Self pollination Artificial selection Sexual selection
Sexual Selection
Individuals in a population showing a preference for mating with a certain phenotype or trait.
Sexual Selection
No Migration (No Gene Flow)
Individuals who join a population may introduce new alleles into the gene pool
Individuals who leave may remove alleles from the gene pool
There must be no movement of individuals into or out of a population.
No Natural Selection
All genotypes in the population must have equal probabilities of surviving and reproducing
No phenotype can have a selective advantage over another.
Shuffling of genes during sexual reproduction produces many different gene combinations but does not alter the relative frequencies of alleles in a population.