BackEvolutionary Processes and Population Genetics
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Ch. 23: Evolutionary Processes
Introduction to Evolutionary Processes
Evolutionary processes are the mechanisms that drive changes in the genetic composition of populations over time. These processes explain the diversity of life and the adaptation of organisms to their environments.
Evolution is the change in allele frequencies in a population over generations.
Key mechanisms include natural selection, genetic drift, gene flow, and mutation.
All About Alleles
Definition and Importance of Alleles
An allele is a variant form of a gene. Different alleles can result in different traits, such as eye color, flower color, or fur color in animals.
Alleles are found at specific locations (loci) on chromosomes.
Variation in alleles is the basis for genetic diversity within a population.
Examples: Eye color in humans, flower color in plants, fur color in dogs and rabbits.
Driving Forces of Evolution
Main Mechanisms That Change Allele Frequencies
There are four primary mechanisms that cause evolution by altering allele frequencies in populations:
Natural Selection: Increases the frequency of alleles that contribute to reproductive success in a particular environment.
Genetic Drift: Causes allele frequencies to change randomly, especially in small populations.
Gene Flow: Occurs when individuals move between populations, introducing new alleles and altering frequencies.
Mutation: Modifies allele frequencies by continually introducing new alleles into the gene pool.
The Hardy-Weinberg Principle
Population Genetics and Genetic Equilibrium
The Hardy-Weinberg Principle provides a mathematical model to study genetic variation in populations. It predicts how gene frequencies will be inherited from one generation to the next under ideal conditions.
Developed by G. H. Hardy and Wilhelm Weinberg in 1908.
Assumes a large, randomly mating population with no evolutionary forces acting (no selection, mutation, migration, or genetic drift).
The gene pool concept treats all alleles from all gametes as a single group that combines randomly.
Hardy-Weinberg Equation:
= frequency of the dominant allele
= frequency of the recessive allele
= frequency of homozygous dominant genotype
= frequency of heterozygous genotype
= frequency of homozygous recessive genotype
(the sum of allele frequencies equals 1)
Applications: The Hardy-Weinberg Principle serves as a null hypothesis for detecting evolutionary change. If observed genotype frequencies differ from expected frequencies, at least one evolutionary mechanism is at work.
Summary Table: Evolutionary Mechanisms
Mechanism | Effect on Allele Frequencies | Directionality | Source of Variation |
|---|---|---|---|
Natural Selection | Increases frequency of beneficial alleles | Non-random | Acts on existing variation |
Genetic Drift | Random changes, especially in small populations | Random | Can reduce variation |
Gene Flow | Introduces or removes alleles | Random with respect to fitness | Increases variation |
Mutation | Creates new alleles | Random | Ultimate source of new variation |
Key Terms
Allele: A variant form of a gene.
Gene Pool: The total collection of alleles in a population.
Genotype: The genetic makeup of an individual.
Phenotype: The observable traits of an individual.
Population: A group of individuals of the same species living in the same area.
Evolution: Change in allele frequencies in a population over time.
Example: Calculating Hardy-Weinberg Frequencies
If the frequency of allele A () is 0.7 and allele a () is 0.3 in a population, the expected genotype frequencies are:
AA: (49%)
Aa: (42%)
aa: (9%)
Conclusion
Understanding evolutionary processes and the Hardy-Weinberg Principle is fundamental to studying how populations change over time. These concepts form the basis for modern evolutionary biology and population genetics.