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EVOLUTION & SPECIATION

EVOLUTION & SPECIATION

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EVOLUTION & SPECIATION. Microevolution. What is it?. changes in the gene pool of a population over time which result in relatively small changes to the organisms in the population changes which would not result in the newer organisms being considered a different species. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: EVOLUTION & SPECIATION

EVOLUTION & SPECIATION

Page 2: EVOLUTION & SPECIATION

Microevolution. What is it?

• changes in the gene pool of a population over time which result in relatively small changes to the organisms in the population

• changes which would not result in the newer organisms being considered a different species.

• Examples would include a change in a species’ coloring or size.

Page 3: EVOLUTION & SPECIATION

VOCABULARY REVIEW• EVOLUTION – CHANGE OVER TIME

• NATURAL SELECTION INDIVIDUALS BETTER ADAPTED TO THE ENVIRONMENT ARE ABLE TO SURVIVE & REPRODUCE– A.K.A. “SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST”

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NEW VOCABULARY

• POPULATION GROUP OF INDIVIDUALS OF SAME SPECIES THAT INTERBREED

• GENE POOL COMMON GROUP OF ALL GENES PRESENT IN A POPULATION

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Evolution of Populations

Occurs when there is a change in relative frequency of alleles

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Gene PoolCombined genetic

information of all members

Allele frequency is # of times alleles occur

For some traits certain phenotypes appear more frequently

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Variation in Populations2 processes

can lead to this:

Mutations -change in DNA sequence DO not always

change the phenotypes, but can affect an organisms 'fitness'.

Gene Shuffling –

from sexual reproduction

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Mechanisms of Microevolution

1.Natural Selection2.Sexual Selection3.Genetic Drift4.Gene Flow

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• Natural Selection: environment increases the frequency of alleles that provide a reproductive advantage

• only form of microevolution that adapts a population to its environment

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Generation 1: 1.00 not resistant0.00 resistant

Resistance to antibacterial soap

How natural selection works

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Resistance to antibacterial soapGeneration 1: 1.00 not resistant

0.00 resistant

How natural selection works

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Resistance to antibacterial soap

mutation!

Generation 1: 1.00 not resistant0.00 resistant

Generation 2: 0.96 not resistant0.04 resistant

How natural selection works

Page 13: EVOLUTION & SPECIATION

Resistance to antibacterial soap

Generation 1: 1.00 not resistant0.00 resistant

Generation 2: 0.96 not resistant0.04 resistant

Generation 3: 0.76 not resistant0.24 resistant

How natural selection works

Page 14: EVOLUTION & SPECIATION

Resistance to antibacterial soapGeneration 1: 1.00 not resistant

0.00 resistant

Generation 2: 0.96 not resistant0.04 resistant

Generation 3: 0.76 not resistant0.24 resistant

Generation 4: 0.12 not resistant0.88 resistant

How natural selection works

Page 15: EVOLUTION & SPECIATION

Natural Selection on Different Traits

3 Types that affect the phenotypes in a population

1. Shifts to middle range

2. Shifts to 2 extremes

3. Shifts to 1 extreme

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1. Stabilizing Selection- individuals near the center of the phenotype range have a higher fitness then those at both ends.

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2. Directional Selection- Population may find itself in circumstances where individuals occupying one extreme in the range of phenotypes are favoured over others

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3. Disruptive Selection- occurs when both extremes are favoured in a population.

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Sexual selection• Sexual

dimorphism: secondary sex characteristic distinction

• Sexual selection: selection towards secondary sex characteristics that leads to sexual dimorphism

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• Nonrandom mating: inbreeding and assortive mating (both shift frequencies of different genotypes)

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•Genetic Drift = changes to allele frequency as a result of chance

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Genetic Drift changes populations…….• Example- Random change in

allele frequency causes an allele to become common

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• Bottleneck effect = dramatic reduction in population size usually resulting in significant genetic drift• Occurs when disasters such as earthquakes, floods, droughts, and fires reduce the population

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• Founder Effect: - Genetic Drift that occurs when individuals from a large population leave to establish a new population

- Allele frequencies of the new population will not be the same as those of the original

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• Gene Flow: genetic exchange due to the migration of fertile individuals or gametes between populations (reduces differences between populations)

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SPECIATION• THE FORMATION OF NEW

SPECIES

• AS NEW SPECIES EVOLVE, POPULATIONS BECOME REPRODUCTIVELY ISOLATED

• REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION – MEMEBERS OF 2 POPULATIONS CANNOT INTERBREED & PRODUCE FERTILE OFFSPRING.

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These squirrels live on opposite sides of the Grand Canyon. This is an example of allopatric speciation.

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SPECIATION IN DARWIN’S

FINCHES• SPECIATION IN THE GALAPAGOS

FINCHES OCCURRED BY:

- FOUNDING OF A NEW POPULATION,

- GEOGRAPHIC ISOLATION which led to -- REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION and

CHANGES IN THE NEW POPULATION’S GENE POOL due to COMPETITION.

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Evidence of Evolution1. Fossil Record

2. Geographic Distribution of Living Species

3. Homologous Body structures

4. Similarities in Embryology

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Evidence of Evolution

Fossil Record provides evidence that living things have evolved

Fossils show the history of life on earth and how different groups of organisms have changed over time

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