The gene pool. The Gene Pool The total number of genes of every individual in a population. Th is could be all the genes for all traits but we usually.

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Presentation transcript:

The gene pool

The Gene Pool The total number of genes of every individual in a population. Th is could be all the genes for all traits but we usually deal with just one gene at a time.

Gene frequencies Each allele has a certain frequency. Example: frequencies (percentages) for A, B and O blood type alleles Note, frequencies are often given as decimals e.g. for American above: 0.67, 0.26, 0.07

In the gene pool below, 60% (0.6) of the alleles are black (B) and 40% (0.4) are white (b). The percent of alleles in a pool is known as an allele frequency. The sum of all alleles in any pool must be 100% (1.0).

Changing Gene Frequencies = EVOLUTION!

Changes to gene frequencies The frequency of alleles in a population will remain the same over time if all of the following conditions apply: 1.No mutations occur 2.The population is large 3.Random mating occurs 4.No immigration or emigration occurs 5.No natural selection occurs If one or more of these do not apply then gene frequencies will change over time (= evolution)

Sources of Variation Mutation is the ultimate source of all variation. They are often recessive and harmful. Occasionally they are beneficial. They have to be able to be passed on – gametic mutations rather than somatic.

Other variation Crossing over in meiosis can produce new combinations of genes to make offspring different from parents and each other. In sexual reproduction there is independent assortment of parental chromosomes in gamete formation then random joining of gametes in fertilisation.

Mutation

Large Population If a population is large, allele frequencies are unlikely to be affected by random events such as natural disasters

Large vs small population example

Genetic Drift This effect is most important in small populations. Allele frequency change simply due to chance Populations subject to genetic drift have allele frequencies that differ from other populations and are often missing some alleles

(Genetic Drift continued) If an event such as a flood or fire randomly kills individuals with rare alleles, the frequency of those alleles is suddenly much lower.

Founder Effect This is genetic drift occurring in groups formed from a few individuals leaving a large population The founding group may have allele frequencies that differ from the parent population These frequencies may be continued or increased over time

(Founder Effect continued) Small island populations of animals and plants often show this. American Indians virtually lack B blood Some religious groups in The U.S.A. have unusual frequencies for blood type alleles and polydactyly is more common.

Population bottleneck This is genetic drift occurring in groups in which a few individuals have survived an event that greatly reduced the size of the population. Genetic diversity decreases and stays that way despite an increase in size. Cheetahs in Africa show evidence of having passed through one about years ago

Bottleneck Effect

Genetic Bottlenecks A disaster such as an eruption, fire or flood can reduce a population in a random way. This is similar to the founder effect in that the gene pool becomes limited and open to genetic drift. E.g. Chatham Island black robin Cheetahs

Old Blue All of the 250 Chatham Islands Black robins alive today are descended from this female.

Random Mating

Non-random mating Few species actually mate randomly. Many mate with near neighbours in their own population. Many select mates based on certain traits (e.g. long tail - peacocks). Kakapo use Lek mating behaviour. Males “boom” on one spot and females are attracted to the “best” one.

Gene Migration (gene flow) Individuals leaving (emigration) or entering (immigration) a population may change allele frequencies They may introduce new alleles or deplete the population of certain alleles. E.g. flow of sickle cell anaemia genes into North America with the slave trade.

Natural Selection Darwin noted that all species produce many more offspring than are needed to replace the parents. This leads to a struggle for survival. The individual best adapted to their habitat survive and reproduce, those with less favourable variations reproduce fewer offspring or none at all. Over time, the species changes and becomes better suited to its habitat.

(Natural Selection continued) For most traits a range of phenotypes exist that fall into a normal distribution with a bell shaped curve E.g. Height Selective forces such as predation, nutrients, amount of water etc. can act in the population in 3 ways:

1. Selection against both extremes The average is favoured. This is Stabilising natural selection E.g. human birth weights

This example shows that small and large clutch size are selected against in some bird species so stabilising selection occurs

2. Selection against one extreme One extreme is favoured. This is Directional natural selection E.g. Giraffe neck length

Peppered moths Melanic (black) moths were selected against before the industrial revolution. Light ones were selected against after the trees became covered with soot Light moth

3. Selection against the mean Both extremes are favoured. The mean is selected against. This is Disruptive natural selection

Disruptive natural selection E.g. When banded or unbanded snails are selected for but intermediate forms selected against. (see next slide)

Cepaea snails (see Biozone) Have a wide colour and banding range Dark brown forms selected in woodland, but light yellow forms selected in grassland

Another example in butterflies Light AND dark selected for – middle shades selected against

Natural Selection - Summary Three types 1.Stabilising Maintains allele frequencies 2.Directional Favours one extreme 3.Disruptive Favours both extremes but not the average