AP Bio Chapter 23
Why does average heterozygosity tend to be greater than nucleotide variability?
- a gene can consist of thousands of bases of DNA. -a difference at only one of these bases is sufficient to make two alleles of that gene different and increase the heterozygosity
Why can't natural selection fashion perfect organisms?
- evolution is limited by historical constraints -adaptations are often compromises -chance and natural selection interact - selection can edit only existing variations
Natural selection can alter the frequency distribution of heritable traits in three ways:
-directional selection -disruptive selection -stabilizing selection
As with allele frequencies, all of these genotype frequencies sum to _
1
the relative fitness of most reproductively successful variants is set at _ as a basis for comparison
1
state at which the allele frequencies are the same from one generation to the next, but its genotype frequencies can be predicted from the allele frequencies
Hardy-Weinburg Equilibrium
the _______ _______ is measured as the average percent of these loci that are heterozygous.
average heterozygosity
_______ ____ occurs when natural selection maintains stable frequencies of two or more phenotypic forms in a population, a state called _______ _____.
balancing selection; balanced polymorphism
Darwin and other realized over time that _______ would eliminate the differences between individuals
blending
Two situations that can increase the likelihood that genetic drift will have a large impact on a population are referred to as the _________ ____ and the ________ _____
bottleneck effect; founder effect
_______ _____ is most common when a population's environment changes or when members of a population migrate to a new habitat with different environmental conditions than their former one
directional selection
_______ ____, such as the red, pink and white colors of our hypothetical wildflower population, can be classified on an ____-__ Basis.
discrete characters; either or
both ______ and ________ characters contribute to variation within a population
discrete; quantitative
What type of selection is this: a population of black-bellies seed cracker finches in Cameroon displays two distinctly different beak sizes. Small billed bird feed mainly on soft seeds, whereas large-billed bird specialize in cracking hard seeds. It appears that birds with intermediate size bills are relatively inefficient at cracking both types of seeds, thus have lower relative fitness
disruptive selection
___________ ____ occurs when conditions favor individuals on both extremes of a phenotypic range over individuals with intermediate phenotypes
disruptive selection
However, some noncoding regions of DNA __ _________ the expression of genes. Changes in these regulatory regions of DNA can have _____ ______
do regulate; profound effects
the contribution an individual makes to the gene pool of the next generation relative to the contributions of other individuals
fitness
It is important to remember that only the _____ _____ of variation can have evolutionary consequences as a result of _____ _______
genetic component; natural selection
Of course, it is possible that ____ ____ that appear to be neutral may actually influence ______ and _______ success in ways that are difficult to measure. Furthermore, a variant allele may be ______ in one environment but not in another
genetic differences; survival; reproductive; neutral
An example of this _______ _____ occurs at the locus in humans that codes for one of the peptide subunits in hemoglobin. In homozygous individuals, a recessive allele at that locus causes sickle-cell disease. However, heterozygotes are protected against the severest effects of malaria
heterozygote advantage
Mutation rates tend to be ____ in animals and plants. But in ____________ and ______ with short generation spans, mutations can rapidly generate genetic variation.
low; microorganisms; viruses
Intrasexual selection is most obvious in ____
males
three major factors that alter allele frequencies and cause most evolutionary change are ________ ______, ______ ______, and _____ ____
natural selection; genetic drift; gene flow
Most of the DNA base differences between humans that are down in untranslated parts of the genome appear to confer no selective advantage and therefore are considered _______ ____
neutral variation
We now know that selection results in alleles being passed to the next generation in proportions different from their _____ _______ in the present generation.
relative frequencies
Recombination _______ alleles, but does not change their _________.
reshuffles; frequencies
Sexual selection can result in ______ ________
sexual dimorphism
What are the five conditions for Hardy-Weinberg
1. Extremely large population size 2. No gene flow 3. No mutations 4. Random mating 5. No natural selection
Example of ____ ____: suppose, that near our original hypothetical wildflower population their is a newly established wildflower population consisting of primary of _____-______ individuals. Insects carrying pollen from these plants may fly to and pollinate plants in our ______ ____. The introduced C^W alleles will ______ our original population's _____ ______ in the next generation
Gene flow: white flowered; original population; modify; allele frequencies
_______ proposed just such a model: the particulate hypothesis of inheritance, which states that parents pass on _____ ____ ____ (genes) that retain their identities in offspring.
Mendel; discrete heritable units
most heritable variation consists of _________ _____ that vary along
Quantitative characters
______ ______ that are less favorable than their dominant counterparts, or even ________ in the current environment, can persist because they are _______ in heterozygous individuals
Recessive alleles; harmful; propagated
The _________ that sex provides: one explanation is that the process of ______ recombination and ________ generate the genetic variation on which _______ ______ acts. The assumption is that natural selection sustains ___, in spite of its reproductive drawbacks, because genetic variation enables ______ adaptions to an ever-changing __________
advantage; meiotic; fertilization; natural selection; sex; future; environment
Every time a female chooses a mate based on certain appearance or behavior, she perpetuates the _____ that _______ her to make that choice, allowing a male with an especially showy _______ to pass on his _____ to offspring
alleles; influences; phenotype; alleles
The gene pool consist of all ____ at all the gene _____ in all individuals of a _________.
alleles; loci; population
_______ events affect the subsequent evolutionary history of populations. Thus, not all alleles present in the founding population's ____ ____ are better suited to the new _______ than alleles "left behind"
chance; gene pool; environment
sex provides for "_______ the ____" and varying them among _____.
changing; locks; offspring
the smaller the sample, the greater the chance of _______ from the _____ ____.
deviation; predicted result
Because environmental factors are likely to _____ from one place to another, ______ ____ can contribute to geographic variation.
differ; natural selection
Because most eukaryotes are ______, a considerable amount of genetic variation is hidden from _________ in the form of _______ ____.
diploid; selection; recessive alleles
In _______-_______ _____, the fitness of any one morph declines if it becomes too common in the population
frequency-dependent selection
the heritable component of height is the result of such _______ _______ for alleles at the several loci that influence height
genetic polymorphism
the preservation of _____ ______ provides the opportunity for ______ _____ to act over many generations
genetic variation; natural selection
Although population geneticist often refer to the relative fitness of a ________, it is important to remember that natural selection acts on _________ not ________.
genotype; phenotype; genotype
Selection favors certain ______ _____ through differential _______ ______
heritable traits; reproductive success
Balancing selection includes ________ ______ and ______ _______ selection
heterozygote advantage; frequency dependent
Although the fitness advantage to the ________ is much _____ than the disadvantage to the homozygotes, there are so many more ___________ than _________ that the aggregate benefit of the allele in the population _________ its aggregate harm
heterozygotes; smaller; heterozygotes; homozygotes; balances
the asexual condition would _________ in frequency because all of the females' offspring would be ________ that are able to give birth to more reproductive daughters in turn.
increase; daughters
individuals of one sex (usually females) are choosy in selecting their mates from the other sex
intersexual selection
a direct completion among individuals of one sex for mates of the opposite sex
intrasexual selection
Each species has a _______ of descent with modification from a long line of _________ forms. Evolution does not scrap ________ _____ and build each new complex structure from scratch; it co-opt existing structures and adapts them to new ___________.
legacy; ancestral; ancestral anatomy; situations
the _______ _____ of neutral variations are not affect by ______ _____; overtime some neutral alleles increase in ______ and other ______ through genetic drift
neutral variation; natural selection; frequency; decrease
in the bottleneck effect, certain alleles may be _________ among the survivors, others may be __________, and some may be _______ all together. Genetic drift may continue to have _____ ______ on the gene pool for many generations until the population is _____ enough that chance ________ have less effect
overrepresented; underrepresented; eliminated; substantial effect; large; fluctuations
directional selection shifts the frequency curve for some ______ ______ in one direction or the other by favoring individuals that _________ from the average
phenotypic character; deviate
the study of how populations change genetically over time
population genetics
genes that have become inactive by mutations
pseudogenes
In __________ genetic "_____" is free to accumulate in all parts of the gene
pseudogenes; noise
Sexual reproduction, As a mechanism of ______ ______ ________, it is far inferior to asexual reproduction.
rapid population expansion
the ______ the recessive allele , the ______ the degree of protection from _______ ________
rarer; greater; natural selection
the latent variation is exposed to natural selection only when both parents carry the same ________ _____ and combine ___ copies in one ______. This happens only ____ if the frequency of the recessive allele is very ___.
recessive allele; two; zygotes; rarely; low
the contribution of a genotype to the next generation compared to the contributions of alternative genotypes for the same locus
relative fitness
thus the _______ ____ of a particular allele depends on the _____ genetic and environmental _____ in which it is expressed.
relative fitness; entire; context
Nevertheless, ___ is maintained in the vast majority of eukaryotic species, even those that can also reproduce _______. it must enhance _________ _______ somehow, for otherwise natural selection would act in favor of alleles that promote ______ _________.
sex; asexually; reproductive success; asexual production
marked differences between the sexes in secondary sexual characteristics, which are not directly associated with reproduction
sexual dimorphism
_______ ______ is far more important than mutation on a generation-to-generation time scale in producing the variations that make adaptation possible
sexual recombination
natural selection for mating success.
sexual selection
In many cases of intersexual selection, the female's choice depends on the ______ of the male's _______ or behavior. However, because females have ____ ____ to mate than males, a female only gains an advantage over other females if she chooses a mate that enables her to ______ more ________
showiness; appearance; few chances; produce; offspring
the distinctions in sexual selection include ____, _____, and ________
size; color; ornamentation
What type of selection is this: the birth weights for most human babies lie in the rang of 3-4 kg; babies who are much smaller or larger suffer higher rates of mortality
stabilizing selection
_________ ________ act against extreme phenotypes and favored intermediate variants
stabilizing selection
this mode of selection reduces variation and maintains the status quo for a particular phenotypic character.
stabilizing selection
on the other hand, alleles or other pieces of DNA that contribute nothing to an organism's _________ may be perpetuated in individuals whose overall ______ is _____
success; fitness; high
Thus, many factors affect both ________ and ________ and contribute to evolutionary fitness
survival; fertility
But ________ is necessary for reproduction, and _________ increases fitness if it means that long-lived individuals leave more ________ than those who die sooner
survival; longevity; descendants
when individuals who are heterozygous at a particular gene locus have greater fitness than the homozygotes, natural selection will tend to maintain ____ or more _____ at that ___. This is called ______ _____
two; alleles; locus; heterozygous advantage
If there are ____ or more alleles for a particular locus in a population, individuals may be either ____________ or ________
two; homozygous; heterozygous
When there are _____ alleles at a particular locus, the convention is to use _ to represent the frequency of one allele and _ to represent the other allele.
two; p ; q
Individual ________ occurs in populations of all species
variation
the entity that is subjected to natural selection is the ____ _____.
whole organism
Relative fitness is ______ for a sterile plant or animal, even if it is robust and outlives other members of the population
zero
However, in examining __ gene loci in a representative sample of the seals, researchers found __ ________: for each of the __ _____, there was only ___ ______. In contrast, populations of the southern elephant seal, a closely related species that was not so severely _______, show considerable genetic ______ at these loci
24; no variation; 24 genes; one allele; reduced; variation
______ ____ can also produce allele frequency differences between populations through the cumulative effect of _______ _____ in frequencies rather than ______ _____
Genetic drift; random fluctuations; natural selection
The Hardy- Weinberg theorem describes how ________ ________ preserves genetic variation from one generation to the next in _______ that are not evolving.
Mendelian inheritance; populations
One reason it is important to understand the bottleneck effect is that human actions can sometimes create severe _________ for other species. For example, in the 1890s, hunters reduced the population of northern elephant seals in California to about __ ________. Since then, the mammal has been protected and the population has rebounded to over ________.
bottleneck; 20 individuals; 30,000
Only mutations in ____ _____ that produce gametes can be passed to ____________, and only a small fraction of these spread through _________.
cell lines; gametes; populations
Each allele has a _________ (proportion) in the population.
frequency
the aggregate of genes in a population at any one time is called the population's ____ ____
gene pool
If such a duplicated segment does not have sever effects, to can persist over __________, providing an expanded ________ with new ____ that may take on new ________ by further mutations an subsequent selection.
generations; genome; genes; functions
by introducing or removing _____ from chromosomes or by changing one ____ into another, mutations can modify the ____ ____
genes; allele; gene pool
In other cases, a ________ in some environmental variable may produce a ______.
graduation; cline
We can define evolutionary change on its smallest scale or ____________, as change in the genetic makeup of a population from generation to generation
microevolution
by the mid-20th century population genetics also gave rise to what is called the _______ _____, a comprehensive theory of evolution that integrated ideas from many other fields
modern synthesis
A Change of as little as one base in a gene - _____ _______ - can have a significant effect on the _______. But most point mutations are probably _________.
point mutations; phenotype; harmless
a localized group of individuals that are capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring.
populations
Thus, the equation for Hardy Weinberg equilibrium states that a locus with ___ alleles, the ______ genotypes will appear in the following proportions: _____________
two; three; p^2 + 2pq +q^2 = 1
_______ and many ______ can also undergo recombination, but they do so less _______ than animals and plants and often in ways that allow them to cross ____ ______.
Bacteria; viruses; regularly; species barriers
it is not possible to predict how mutations will alter ____ and what its _____ will be. Most mutations occur in ______ _____ and are lost when the individual _____.
DNA; effects; somatic cells; dies
Differential survival and reproductive success of individuals carrying different genotypes will alter _____ ______
allelic frequencies
According the the Hardy Weinberg theorem, the _______ ________ in all the gametes produced by the population will be the _____ as in the original population
allelic frequencies; same
Still, individuals near the population center more likely to _____ with members of their own ________ than other ________ and thus on average more closely related to another more than to members of other ________
breed; population; populations; population
some examples of geographic variation can occur as a ______, a graded changes in a trait along a geographic axis
cline
Chromosomal mutations that _____, _______, or ______ many loci at once are almost certain to be harmful. However, when such mutations leave the gene ______, their effects on organisms may be ______.
delete; disrupt; rearrange; intact; neutral
gene flow tends to reduce ________ between ________.
differences; populations
Over time, _____ tends to reduce _____ _____ through such losses of allele from the ___ ____
drift; genetic variation
Gene _________ is an important source of variation. ________ of chromosome segments, are nearly always harmful. But _____ _____ of DNA are often introduced into a genome through the activity of ________ elements.
duplication; duplication; small pieces; transposable
A sudden change in the ________, such as a fire or a flood, may drastically reduce the size of a ______. IN effect, the survivors have passed through a restrictive "_______", and the gene pool may no long be ______ of the original population's _____ ____; This is called the ________ _____
environment; population; bottleneck; reflective; gene pool; bottleneck effect
departure of the five conditions of Hardy- Weinberg usually results in ________. While ______ ______ rarely if ever are in true Hardy- Weinberg equilibrium, in many populations that rate of evolutionary change is so _____ that these populations ______ to be close to equilibrium
evolution; natural populations; slow; appear
When a few individuals become isolated from a larger population, this smaller group may establish a new population whose gene pool is not reflective of the source population: this is called the ______ ______
founder effect
the ______ ____ can occur when a few members of a population _________ a new location. these founders pass through an "________ ______" and represent a distinct gene pool with different _______ ______ from those of the parent population
founder effect' colonize; isolation bottle neck; allele frequencies
the repeated shuffling of population's gene pool over the generations cannot, in itself, change the _______ of one ______ relative to another
frequency; allele
the Hardy Weinberg theorem states that the ________ fo alleles and _______ in a population's gene pool remain _______ from generation to generation, provided that only ________ _________ and _________ of alleles are at work
frequency; genotypes; constant; Mendelian segregation; recombination
one reason is that much of the DNA in eukaryotic ________ does not code for _____ ______. And because the genetic code is ____________, even point mutations in genes that code for proteins may have _____ ____ because they do not alter protein's amino acid composition.
gametes; protein products; redundant; little effect
A population may gain or lose alleles by _____ ____, genetic additions to and/ or subtractions from a population resulting from the movement of fertile individuals or gametes
gene flow
_____ _____, the transfer of alleles between populations, can alter allele frequencies
gene flow
If it is extensive enough, ____ _____ can amalgamate neighboring populations into a _____ _____ with a common ___ ___.
gene flow; single population; gene pool
such beneficial increase in ____ _____ appear to have played a major role in evolution.
gene number
Heritable quantitative variation results from the influence of two or more _____ on a single ___________ character
genes; phenotypic
If individuals preferentially choose mates with certain __________, including close relatives, random mixing of _______ does not occur
genotypes; gametes
Most species exhibit _______ _______, differences between the gene pools of separate population subgroups
geographic variation
In some cases, cline may represent a ____ ____ of overlap where individuals of neighboring populations are __________.
graded region; interbreeding
In contrast, _____ ______ in the human population does not show phenotypic polymorphism because it does not consist of ______ and ______ morphs. - heights vary along a _________.
height variation; distinct; separate; continuum
Population geneticist measure the number of polymorphisms in a population by determining the amount of ___________ at both the level of ____ _____ (gene variability) and the molecular level of ____ (nucleotide variability)
heterozygosity; whole genes; DNA
Nonrandom mating can affect relative frequencies of __________ and ________ genotypes but by itself but usually has no effect on _____ _____.
homozygotes; heterozygotes; allele frequencies
Ideas about ________ from Darwin's time could not explain how inherited _______ are maintained in _________
inheritance; variations; populations
the founder effect probably accounts for the relatively high frequency of certain ______ _____ among isolated ____ ________
inherited disorders; human populations
populations of the same species may be _______ from one another, thus changing _____ ______ only rarely. Such __________ is common for population confined to different, widely separated _____ or _____.
isolated; genetic material; isolation; islands; lakes
The Hardy-Weinberg theorem lays the groundwork for understanding ____-____ __________ changes that Darwin could not have envisioned
long-term evolutionary
When individuals differ in discrete characters, the different forms are called _______
morphs
New genes and new alleles originate only by _________ which are changes in the nucleotide sequence of DNA
mutations
Although new ________ can modify allele frequencies, the change from oner generation to the next is likely to be ______
mutations; small
Of all the factors that can change a gene pool, only ____ ______ is likely to adapt a population to its environment.
natural selection
Nucleotide variability is measured by comparing the ______ _______ of DNA samples from two individuals and then __________ the data from many such comparisons
nucleotide sequences; averaging
If only _____ allele exists at a particular locus in a population, that allele is said to be _______ in the gene pool, and all individuals are ___________ for that allele
one; fixed; homozygous
Organisms reflect thousands of generations of ____ ______, and a single mutational change is about as likely to ______ the genome as blindly firing a gunshot through the hood of a car is likely to improve engine performance
past selection; improve
The Hardy Weinberg equation can be used to estimate the _________ of the population carrying the allele for an _______ ______
percentage; inheritable disease
a population is said to display __________ __________ for a character if two or more distant morphs are each represented in high enough frequencies to be readily noticeable.
phenotypic polymorphism
Nearly all _________ variations based on genetic differences result from recombinational shuffling of the _______ _____ in the gene pool.
phenotypic; existing alleles
Not all _________ variation is heritable. Phenotype is the cumulative product of an inherited _________ and a multitude of ________ _______.
phenotypic; genotype; environmental factors
For example, in our imaginary wildflower population, white flowers might be more visible to ____-____ _______ resulting in more white flowers being _____. And perhaps red flowers are more attractive to _______, increasing the opportunity for red flowers to produce _________. These differences in survival and reproductive success would disturb _______ -________ ______: the frequency of the C^W allele would ____ in the gene pool and the frequency of the C^R allele would ______.
plant eating insects; eaten; pollinators; offspring; Hardy Weinberg equilibrium; decrease; increase
a population is not considered ________ if it consists primarily of a ____ _____ and other morphs are extremely _____
polymorphic; single morph; rare
Darwin considered the raw material for natural selection to be "_____________" characteristics. - those characteristics in a population that _____ long a ______, such as fur length in mammals or the running speed of animals fleeing from predators
quantitative; vary; continuum
Provided that gametes are contributed to the best generation at ________, allele frequencies will be ________
random; unchanged
if a population were in Hardy- Weinberg equilibrium and its members continued to mate ___________ generation after generation, Allele and genotype frequencies remain ______
randomly; constant
Similar deviation from the expected result -which occur because ____ _____ are ____ in size rather than _______- explain how the allele frequencies can ______ __________ from one generation to the next. Such fluctuations are called ______ _____
real populations; finite; infinite; fluctuate unpredictably; genetic drift
In rare cases, chromosomal _________ may even be beneficial. For example, the translocation of part of one chromosome to a different chromosome could link ______ that together have some heightened _____ _____
rearrangement; genes; positive effect
Because of _____-_______, pea populations are far from _____-_______ _____. All the ___________ plants produce only _______ while about half the offspring of the heterozygous plants are ________. It does not take many generations before almost all the plants in the population are _______. But even though such species do not mate __________, they still produce their gametes at ____ from their ____ _____
self-fertilization; Hardy Weinberg Equilibrium; homozygous; homozygous; homozygous; randomly; random; green pools
discrete characters often are determined by a _____ ____ ____ with different alleles that produce distinct ________.
single gene locus; phenotype
the ______ the population, the greater the role played by chance fluctuations in _____ ______ from one generations to the next, known as _____ _____
smaller; allelic frequencies; genetic drift
on rare occasions, however, a mutant allele may actually make its barer better _____ to the ___________, enhancing ________ ____. this is more likely when the environment is _________ and mutations that were once selected ______ become ______
suited; environment; reproductive success; changing; against; favorable
________ are always present, and as Darwin realized, variations that are heritable are the raw material for _______ _____. In addition to the differences that we can see or hear, populations have extensive genetic variation that can be observed at the _______ ____. For example a person's ___ ____
variations; natural selection; molecular level; blood group