Transcript Chapter 16
Chapter 16
Population Genetics and Speciation
Objectives
CLE 3210.5.3 Explain how genetic
variation in a population and changing
environmental conditions are associated
with adaptation and the emergence of
new species.
Darwin’s
Finches
http://people.rit.edu/rhrsbi/GalapagosPages/Pictures/LandBirds/FinchType
http://www.biology-online.org/images/darwin_finches.jpg
Five conditions under which
evolution may take place
Genetic mutations
Gene flow
Genetic drift
Nonrandom mating
Natural selection.
Mutation
Mutations are changes in the DNA.
Gene Flow
Emigration and immigration cause
gene flow between populations and
can thus affect gene frequencies.
Genetic Drift
Genetic drift is a change in allele
frequencies due to random events.
Genetic drift operates most strongly
in small populations.
Nonrandom Mating
Mating is nonrandom whenever
individuals may choose partners.
Sexual selection occurs when certain traits
increase an individual’s success at mating.
Sexual selection explains the development
of traits that improve reproductive success
but that may harm the individual.
Natural Selection
Three general patterns
Stabilizing Selection
Disruptive Selection
favors the formation of average traits.
favors extreme traits rather than average traits.
Directional Selection
favors the formation of more-extreme traits.
The Concept of Species
Biological species concept
a species is a population of organisms
that can successfully interbreed but
cannot breed with other groups
Isolation and Speciation
Geographic Isolation
Allopatric Speciation
Speciation due to separation of subgroups of a population
Reproductive Isolation
Results from the separation of population subgroups by
geographic barriers.
Results from the separation of population subgroups by
barriers to successful breeding.
Sympatric Speciation
Reproductive isolation within the same geographic area
Allopatry vs Sympatry
http://deltabiology.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/Sympatry.jpg
http://scienceblogs.com/evolvingthoughts/allopatry.jpg
Reproductive isolation:
Monkeyflower
http://faculty.washington.edu/toby/images/mim29%20Nature.jpg
Reproductive isolation
http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/images/evo/drosophila_scene7.g
Rates of Speciation
Gradualism
species undergo small changes at a constant rate.
Punctuated equilibrium
new species arise abruptly, differ greatly from their
ancestors, and then change little over long periods.
Variation of Traits Within a
Population
Variations in genotype arise by mutation,
recombination, and the random pairing of
gametes.
The Gene Pool
The total genetic information available in a
population is called the gene pool.
Allele frequency is determined by dividing the
total number of a certain allele by the total
number of alleles of all types in the population
Predicting Phenotype
Phenotype frequency is equal to the number of
individuals with a particular phenotype divided by
the total number of individuals in the population.
The Hardy-Weinberg Genetic
Equilibrium
Allele frequencies in the gene pool do not
change unless acted upon by certain forces.
Hardy-Weinberg genetic equilibrium is a
theoretical model of a population in which no
evolution occurs and the gene pool of the
population is stable.
Phenotype Frequency
Calculating using the Hardy
Weinberg equation
Dominant allele frequency = p
Recessive allele frequency = q
p+q=1
p2 +2pq+ q2 = 1