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Nile Perch from Lake Victoria. Genetic Diversity.

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Presentation on theme: "Nile Perch from Lake Victoria. Genetic Diversity."— Presentation transcript:

1 Nile Perch from Lake Victoria

2 Genetic Diversity

3 Fitness evolutionary fitness is a measure of the number of offspring an individual produces

4 Loss of Fitness Another important aspect of polymorphism is that it tends to maintain fitness - populations of animals in zoos, which are typically low in genetic diversity, often have low fitness - low fertility and high mortality among offspring

5 Fitness of Zoo Animals

6 Reasons for Loss of Fitness 1. increased incidence of deleterious recessive homozygous individuals 2. lack of heterosis – heterosis (hybrid vigor) is the phenomenon where heterozygous individuals have higher fitness than do homozygotes - often heterozygotes are more resistant to disease 3. lack of evolutionary potential - with all homozygotes there is lack of variation and all individuals will be susceptible to the same problems

7 Inbreeding Depression Inbreeding depression is the loss of fitness resulting from the breeding of closely related individuals - it occurs due to the three reasons listed before

8 Ngorongoro Crater

9 Lions at Ngorongoro Crater

10 Vipera berus - adder

11 Glanville Fritillary Butterfly

12 Outbreeding Depression The loss of fitness that occurs when distantly related individuals breed – This occurs because certain populations may have been selected for traits that are successful in their environment, so that introducing novel traits may reduce fitness for that environment

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14 Austrian Ibex – Capra ibex ibex

15 Turkish Ibex – Capra ibex aegagrus

16 Nubian Ibex – Capra ibex nubiana

17 Optimum outbreeding in Japanese Quail

18 Fitness evolutionary fitness is a measure of the number of offspring an individual produces

19 Maintenance of Polymorphism without natural selection - random mating tends to maintain polymorphism – due to the benefits of sexual reproduction – recombination, independent assortment, and crossing over

20 Maintenance of Polymorphism The effects of nonrandom mating are variable - species may either mate assortatively (like with like) or disassortatively (like with unlike) assortative mating results in many homozygous individuals disassortative with many polymorphic, heterozygous individuals

21 Assortative Mating - Three spined stickleback

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23 Disassortative Mating – Nonbreeding Ruff

24 Disassortative Mating - Breeding male ruff and variations on head pattern

25 Maintenance of Polymorphism environmental variance - the environment may affect development of different genotypes so that which genotype dominates changes with the environment - if the environment varies or different habitats exist within the species range, then different genotypes will exist

26 Backswimmers – winged or wingless forms

27 Maintenance of Polymorphism With Natural Selection with selection, we would expect the most fit genotype to come to dominate the population, but polymorphism may still occur: 1. selection acts to maintain stable polymorphism so that different genotypes are most fit under different situations 2. fixation of a particular genotype is counteracted by mutation 3. fixation of a particular genotype in one population is counteracted by gene flow from another population

28 Polymorphism under selection – in the Grove Snail - Cepaea

29 Clines in many species, local populations have little variation, but the entire species exhibits much variation as local populations are adapted to different conditions - if these changes in genes change in response to certain environmental variables, we may see a cline - a gradual change along a geographic transect

30 Clines with Body Size Bergmann's rule - many animals get larger in size as the species range approaches the poles - it is related to ability to keep warm - larger bodies maintain warmth better Allen’s Rule – size of extremities decreases towards the poles – heat is lost through things like large ears

31 Bergman’s Rule in same aged White-tailed Deer

32 Allen’s Rule in Foxes Arctic Fox Desert (Kit) Fox

33 Allen’s Rule in Hares

34 Cline in Cyanide Production in White Clover

35 Cline in cyanide production by white clover

36 Greater Racquet-tailed Drongo cline in crest size

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38 Reductions in Polymorphism Gene Flow - the movement of alleles from one population to another tends to maintain genetic similarity among populations

39 African Wild Dog

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41 Rates of Gene Flow – Ne (effective population size) = 120

42 Minimum Viable Population The smallest population for a species which can be expected to survive for a long time Many factors effect MVP – the study of those factors is often called Population Viability Analysis – or Population Vulnerability Analysis – or PVA

43 Factors that make populations vulnerable to extinction Environmental fluctuations Catastrophes Demographic uncertainties Genetic problems Habitat fragmentation

44 Environmental Fluctuations

45 Kirtland’s Warbler

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48 Cheetah

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50 Habitat Fragmentation Fragmentation is the transformation of large expanse of habitat into a number of smaller patches of smaller total area isolated from each other by a matrix of habitat unlike the original

51 Habitat Fragmentation Habitat fragmentation occurs due to: Natural climatic shifts Human caused habitat loss: logging, agriculture, urbanization, dams, road construction, etc. Overexploitation of species Species introduction Secondary effects due to extinctions

52 Domesday Book – 1085-86

53 Selection from the Domesday Book

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55 Factors that make populations vulnerable to extinction Environmental fluctuations Catastrophes Demographic uncertainties Genetic problems Habitat fragmentation

56 Heath Hen – Extinction Vortex

57 Minimum Viable Population Size Another definition - often defined as 95% probability of 100 year survival, but can also plan for longer survival (500 or 1000 years) MVP is usually determined by modeling

58 Forces which may cause extinction 1) deterministic - something essential is removed (habitat loss) or something lethal is added (pollutant, disease, introduced species) - presumably we can act to minimize these risks

59 Forces which may cause extinction 2) stochastic (random) - environmental, catastrophic, demographic and genetic - this is what we need to worry about and what is hardest to prevent environmental randomness effects resources and conditions and we can't do much about it catastrophic randomness - floods, fires, hurricanes, volcanoes - can't really prevent but can spread individuals around to minimize the impact demographic - just natural random variation in birth and death rates can lead to extinction genetic - lack of genetic variability can lead to problems of inbreeding and poor response to diseases and environmental change

60 Bighorn Sheep and MVP

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62 Grizzly Bear and 50/500 Rule

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64 MVP – 50/500 Rule?

65 Reductions in Polymorphism Reductions in population size can lead to losses of genetic polymorphism Two special cases of reductions in population size are: 1.A few individuals move to a new area and start a new population that is isolated from other populations – founder effect 2.We can also experience a population bottleneck where a formerly large population is drastically reduced in size

66 Founder Effect – Galapagos Tortoise

67 Founder effect – Amish and Polydactyly

68 Population Bottleneck – Northern Elephant Seal


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