Biology 1620: First quiz
germ-line mutation
- A mutation that occurs in the egg and sperm or in the cells that give rise to these reproductive cells and therefore is passed on to the next generation
Scientific theory criteria: 2 and scientific theories are often comprised of two components, what are they?
1. Is not a guess 2. Explains a broad class of observations and is widely supported by evidence Scientific theories are often comprised of two components: 1. Pattern—observations about natural world 2. Process—mechanism that produces that pattern
Mutation is important in evolution: 3
1. Mutation is the ultimate source of genetic variation 2. Without mutations, evolution would eventually stop by maintaining genetic variation in populations 3. Mutation alone is usually inconsequential in changing allele frequencies at a particular gene
somatic mutation
A mutation that occurs in the somatic cells, will not affect the offspring of that individual
somatic cell
A nonreproductive cell, the most common type of cell in the body of a multicellular organism
• Geographic isolation occurs in one of two ways: Dispersal and Vicariance
A population moves to a new habitat, colonizes it, and founds a new population, the physical splitting of a habitat • A physical barrier splits a population into subgroups that are physically isolated from each other
population bottlenecks
A sudden decrease in population size in a large population. commonly caused by disease outbreaks and natural catastrophes
Lamarck's theory of evolution
Based on Aristotle's great chain of being • Organisms evolve by moving up the chain over time, evolution is progressive— producing larger, more complex or "better" species over time, the inheritance of acquired characteristics
Historical Constraints
Because all traits evolve from previously existing traits, adaptations are constrained by history • Not all traits are adaptive, and even adaptive traits are constrained by genetic and historical factors
artificial selection
Breeding organisms with specific traits in order to produce offspring with identical traits.
Mutation is the ultimate source of genetic variation (3):
Crossing over and independent assortment shuffle existing alleles into new combinations. Only mutation creates new alleles. Mutation just happens—not because organisms "want" or "need" it
transduction
DNA is transferred from a donor to a recipient cell by a virus
transfmoration
DNA relaeased into the envrionemnt by dead cells is taken up by recipient cell
Natural selection occurs in a wide variety of patterns or modes:
Directional selection • Stabilizing selection • Disruptive selection • Balancing selection
speciation
Disruptive selection, the formation of new species
typological thinking
Every organism was an example of a perfect essence, or type, were made in their current state • Types were essentially unchanging
• Researchers traditionally believed that speciation could not occur among sympatric populations because
Gene flow would overwhelm any differences among populations created by genetic drift and natural selection
At what level does natural selection operate?
Genes - alternative alleles • Individuals - alternative phenotypes (genotypes) • Groups - alternative populations
_______________ _____________ occurs during genetic bottlenecks and causes a change in allele frequencies
Genetic drift
What causes genetic drift in natural populations?
Genetic drift can be caused by any event or process that involves sampling error—not just sampling of gametes during fertilization or loss of individuals through accidents (founder effect and bottlenecks)
Prezygotic barriers
Habitat isolation • Temporal isolation • Behavioral isolation • Mechanical isolation • Gametic isolation
Balancing selection occurs when
Heterozygous individuals have higher fitness than homozygous individuals do—called heterozygote advantage • Consequence is that selection on different alleles is balanced • Genetic variation is maintained in the population 2. Certain alleles are favored at different times or in different places • Although allele frequencies change locally, overall genetic variation in the population is maintained. 3. Certain alleles are favored when they are rare but not when they are common
prezygotic barrier
Individuals of different species are prevented from mating successfully
disruptive selection
Intermediate phenotypes are selected against and extreme phenotypes are favored • Has the opposite effect of stabilizing selection • Increases variation in a trait
negative selection
Natural selection that decreases the frequency of a deleterious allele
positive selection
Natural selection that increases the frequency of an advantageous allele
Disadvantages of the Morphospecies Concept
One polymorphic species may be classified as more than one species • It cannot identify cryptic species that differ in non-morphological traits • The features used to distinguish species under this concept are subjective
inheritance of acquired characteristics
Parental traits are modified through use and then passed on
genetic bottlenecks
Population bottlenecks leads to this. —a sudden reduction in the number of alleles in a population
mechanisms that stop gene flow between populations are categorized into _____________ and _________________.
Prezygotic isolation, Postzygotic isolation
Postzygotic barriers
Reduced hybrid viability • Reduced hybrid fertility • Hybrid breakdown
Maintaining genetic variation is important
Selection can occur only if heritable variation exists in a population • Lack of variation can make populations less able to respond successfully to changes in the environment, and their average fitness will decline • If environmental change is severe, the population may become extinct
_______________ results from genetic isolation and genetic divergence. is a splitting event that creates two or more distinct species from an ancestral species
Speciation
phylogeny
The evolutionary history of a group of organisms
sympatric speciation
The formation of new species in populations that live in the same geographic area
Postzygotic isolation
The hybrid offspring do not survive or reproduce
germ cell
The reproductive cells that produce sperm or eggs and the cells that give rise to them
shared derived characteristics
Therefore, a species is defined as the smallest monophyletic group on the tree of life
Horizontal/Lateral gene transfer
Transfer of genes from one species to another
Morphospecies concept is widely applicable
Useful when there is no data on the extent of gene flow • Equally applicable to sexual, asexual, and fossil species
evolution
a change in the characteristics of a population over time
fitness trade-off
a compromise between traits, in terms of how those traits perform in the environment • Because selection acts on many traits at once, every adaptation is a compromise
A phylogenetic tree shows _______________________________ _________________________________________________________________
a hypothesized evolutionary history of living organisms
ecological species concept
a species is a set of organisms that is adapted to a particular set of resources (niche) in the environment.This explains differences in form and behavior between species as adaptations to resource availability
adaptation occurs when the __________ _______________ in a population change in response to natural selection
allele frequencies
Evolution is a change in ___________ _________________ of a population over time.
allele frequency
Speciation that begins with geographic isolation
allopatric speciation
genetic drift
any change in allele frequencies in a population due to chance (known in statistics as sampling error). • It causes allele frequencies to drift up and down randomly over time. It is especially prevalent in small populations. Changes in allele frequency are not adaptive
Sympatric Speciation by Polyploidization
autopolyploidy, self-fertilization, offspring. or allopolyploidy: sterile offspring/error in mitosis prior to meiosis so that meiosis proceeds nad then self-fertilization --> allopolyploid offspring
Evolution by natural selection is one of the _____ supported and most ______________ theories in modern biology
best, important
Genetic drift
causes allele frequencies to change randomly
Directional selection
changes the average phenotype in the population in one direction, tends to reduce the genetic diversity of populations
monophyletic group
consists of an ancestral population plus all of its descendants
Individuals with self-sacrificing alleles ___ or ____________ _____________ _____________>
die, produce fewer offspring
founder effects
event occurs when a group of individuals establishes a new population in a new area. Allele frequencies likely differ from the source population if the new population is small enough. This change in allele frequencies. especially common in the colonization of isolated habitats like islands.
Genetic drift is random with respect to _______________.
fitness
Some mutations are not in coding regions but can still affect phenotype by affecting ______________ _____________________.
gene expression
Natural selection is not the only mechanism of evolution and each process has a different affect on the _________ _______________ and _____________________________.
genetic diversity, fitness of a population
homozygous
genotype in which both alleles for a given gene are of the same type
heterozygous
genotype in which the two alleles for a given gene are different
Phylogenetic Species Concept
identifies species based on evolutionary history
No matter how natural selection occurs, it ____________ fitness and leads to adaptation
incraases
morphospecies concept
individual lineages differ in size, shape, or other morphological feature • Distinguishing features most likely arise if populations are independent and isolated from gene flow
vestigial trait
is a reduced or incompletely developed structure that has no (or reduced) function • Clearly similar to functioning organs or structures in closely related species
The decline of gene flow between ___________ ___________ _______________ is well documented. Isolating events include ____________ _______________>
isolated wild populations, habitat fragmentation
how does natural selection drive sympatric speciation
it can have the two extremes be more popular, and then once it gets strong enough (disruptive selection) then sympatic speciation occurs
mutations
modifies allele frequencies by continually introducing new alleles
why do adaptations occur
mutation, new source of allele, chance. loss of trait, no such thing as higher/lower organism
mutations can have different impact on fit: deletrious
mutations decrease the fitness of the organism Tend to be eliminated by purifying selection
• Mutations can have different impacts on fit: neutral
mutations do not affect an organism's fitness Occurs when a point mutation does not change the amino acid sequence
mutations do not affect an organism's fitness: beneficial
mutations increase the fitness—ability to survive and reproduce—of an organism Should increase in frequency in a population due to natural selection
Darwin and Wallace
natural selection
Most point mutations are ________ or ______________
neutral, deleterious
Mutation restores genetic diversity by creating _______ ________________, not only new combinations of alleles
new alleles
Thus, it is _____ possible for self-sacrificing alleles to persist by natural selection [we will discuss the evolution of cooperation later]
not
bottlenecks
occur when resources reach full capacity and cannot handle any additional demands; they limit throughput and impede operations
Gene flow
occurs when individuals leave one population, join another, and breed
allopatry
population or species that is physically isolated from other similar groups by an extrinsic barrier to dispersal
• Genetic isolation happens when ______________ __________________________ ________________________________.
populations become geographically separated
allopatry
populations that live in different areas
Descendent with modification
principle that each living species has descended, with changes, from other species over time
Genetic drift is _____________ with respect to fitness
random
stabilizing selection
reduces genetic variation in a trait but does not change average value of a trait over time - Reduces both extremes in a population = Favors intermediate phenotypes
___________ is always occurring at all levels and usually in the same direction The important and interesting cases are when _______ (same word) operates in different directions at different levels.
selection
As a result, ___________ ____________ increase in frequency while self-sacrificing alleles decrease in frequency
selfish allele
Individuals with ________, __________ alleles survive and produce more offspring
selfish, cheater
are all traits from evolution good?
some cannot be optimized due to fitness and trade-offs, some traits are limited by genetic, historical, or environmental constraints
Frequency-dependent selection
the fitness of a phenotype depends on how common it is in the population
biological species concept
the main criterion for identifying species is reproductive isolation
gene flow
the movement of alleles between populations • Occurs when individuals leave one population, join another, and breed. Gene flow equalizes allele frequencies between the source and recipient populations • Gene flow homogenizes allele frequencies among populations • In other words, movement of alleles between populations always tends to reduce their genetic differences
Horizontal/lateral gene transfer
the transfer of genetic material between organisms that are not parent and offspring
Natural selection acts on pre-existing ______________ among individuals
variation
population thinking
variation among individuals in a population was the key to understanding the nature of species
balancing selection
—occurs when no single allele has a distinct advantage • There is a balance among several alleles in terms of their fitness and frequency
genetic variation
—the number and relative frequency of alleles that are present in a particular population
natural selection
• Does not follow a linear, progressive pattern • Is based on variation among individuals in populations • Individuals with certain traits produce more offspring than others without these traits, population thinking, descent with modification
Sexual selection is a form of natural selection, which occurs when (2)
• Females choose certain males, and/or • Males compete among themselves to secure mates
phylogenetic tree
• Is a graphical summary of this history • Shows evolutionary relationships among genes, species and higher taxa
Acclimatization
• Occurs when an individual's phenotype changes in response to changes in the environment • The individual's genotype remains fixed • The changes are not passed on to offspring, because no alleles have changed
sympatry
• Populations or species that live in the same geographic area—close enough to interbreed