1 / 13

Evolution Continued

Evolution Continued. Chapter 16: pgs 392 – 415 Chapter 17: pgs 416 - 445. Variation & Gene Pools. Gene Pool- consists of all genes, including all the different alleles, present in a population Allele- One of a number of different forms of a gene

jwarren
Télécharger la présentation

Evolution Continued

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Evolution Continued Chapter 16: pgs 392 – 415 Chapter 17: pgs 416 - 445

  2. Variation & Gene Pools • Gene Pool- consists of all genes, including all the different alleles, present in a population • Allele- One of a number of different forms of a gene • Relative Frequency- The number of times that the allele occurs in a gene pool • Has nothing to do with the gene being dominant or recessive • Example: Mice being black or brown • Evolution- any change in the relative frequency of alleles in a population

  3. Genetic Variation • Recall- Genetics is a game of chance • Certain Individuals in Small populations pass on particular alleles • Overtime this can cause alleles to appear frequent

  4. Sources of Genetic Variation • Mutations -Any change in a sequence of DNA • Either by mistake in replication OR radiation/chemical • Gene Shuffling- The different combination that occur when two organisms mate • You look like a combination of both parents • Many different combinations

  5. Natural Selection • Natural selection on single-gene traits can lead to changes in allele frequencies and thus evolution • Single-gene trait- A single gene that has two alleles (example: Different species colors) • Mice that stand out get eaten faster • Therefore, Less Likely to survive to reproduce

  6. Natural Selection Continued • Polygenic Traits- Traits controlled by two or more genes (example: height) • Directional Selection- Characteristics of one species is favored Example: Beak Size • Larger VS Smaller (Food Shortage) • Stabilizing Selection- Human baby birth weight • Smaller babies = less healthy • Larger= birth problems

  7. Testing Natural Selection in Nature • Variation • When same species has different anatomical features • Color, size, beaks, total mass • Example: Finches • Natural Selection • Rainy Season VS Dry Season • Rainy = Numerous Sources of Food • Dry = Depleted/Scare sources • These differences create Natural Selection • Rapid Evolution • Once differences occur, species can change features relatively quickly (Each breeding season beaks get bigger

  8. Genetic Drift • In small populations alleles can become more or less common • Controlled by probability • Occurs when a random change of traits occur over time • Such as animals colonizing a new habitat

  9. Genetic Equilibrium • Hardy-Weinberg Principle • Allele frequencies stay constant unless one or more factors cause frequencies to change • 5 required conditions: • Random mating • Very large population • No immigration/emigration • No mutations • No natural selection

  10. Process of Speciation • Isolating mechanisms • As new species evolve, populations become isolated • Behavioral Isolation • 2 species capable of mating, but different courtship • Example: Different mating songs in birds • Geographic Isolation • 2 populations separated by geographic barriers • Example: Squirrels around Grand Canyon • One side has gray & other is black • Temporal Isolation • Two or more species breed at different times • Example: Plants releasing pollen on different days

  11. Ch. 17 History of Life • Paleontologists • Scientists who study fossils • Fossil Record • Grouping of organisms based on characteristics • Provides evidence about the history of life on Earth • Shows how different groups have changed over time • Extinction • When species die out • More than 99% of all species are already extinct

  12. Patterns of Evolution • Adaptive Radiation • Process where species evolve into new and divers forms and create new species • Darwin’s finches! • Convergent Evolution • Occurs when two entirely different, unrelated species, develop similar characteristics • Examples: fish, dolphins, sea lions & penguins

  13. Patterns of Evolution Cont. • Coevolution • A process where two species who interact with each other evolve together • Example: Flowers & Pollinators (bees) • Punctuated Equilibrium • Scientists use this to describe patterns of long stable periods interrupted by periods of rapid change in the fossil record • Finches moving from island to island • Trying to fill available niches

More Related