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Mechanisms of Evolution

Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &

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Page 1: Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &

Mechanisms of Evolution

Page 2: Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &

Hardy-Weinberg Principle

A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment & contribute equally to the next generation1. Five conditions for this to occur

a. No Genetic Driftb. No Gene Flowc. No Mutationsd. Mating must be randome. No Natural Selection

Page 3: Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &

Genetic Drift

B. Chance occurrences can cause an allele to become more or less common1. Founder Effect: result of migration (Darwin’s finches)

Ex. Amish and Mennonites: people rarely marry outside their own communities; Old Order Amish—high frequency of 6-finger dwarfism—can trace ancestry back to one of the founders of the order

2. Bottleneck: result of a dramatic reduction in population size and then rebounds; might be a possible factor in the potential extinction of a speciesEx. Cheetahs in Africa are so genetically similar they appear inbred; researchers think there was a bottleneck 10,000 yrs ago, and then again 100 yrs ago

Page 4: Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &

Gene Flow

C. Rate at which genes enter or leave the population—random migration naturally increases variation

Page 5: Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &

Nonrandom Mating

D. Organisms usually mate w/individuals in close proximity which promotes inbreeding

Page 6: Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &

Mutation

E. Some are harmful, some are advantageous

Page 7: Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &

Natural Selection

F. Acts to select those individuals that are best adapted for a particular environment

Page 8: Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &

Reproductive Isolation

G. Prevents gene flow among populationsEx. 2 species can mate to produce a hybrid

which is sterile (liger)**Other forms of isolation are more specific forms of this

Page 9: Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &

Speciation

H. Population diverges and new species is reproductively isolated

Page 10: Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &

Patterns of Evolution

A. Adaptive Radiation: many related species evolve from a single species (Darwin’s finches)—usually due to different environments Ex. guppies in a pool on the same river

B. Coevolution: 2 or more species change together

C. Convergent Evolution: 2 unrelated species have similar characteristics

D. Rate of Speciation: usually is gradual, but there have been periods of abrupt transitions

Page 11: Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &

Adaptive Radiation

Page 12: Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &

Coevolution

Acacia ants live in thorns of acacia tree. Plant make substance used by ants as food. Ants defend tree from herbivores by attacking/stinging any animal that brushes up against the tree

Page 13: Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &

Convergent Evolution

Page 14: Mechanisms of Evolution. Hardy-Weinberg Principle A. A population is in genetic equilibrium—all individuals are equally adapted to their environment &

Rate of Speciation