Natural Selection

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Natural Selection 17.3, 16.1, 16.3d, 16.5 Charles Darwin (1809-1882) - 1831 – travels on HMS Beagle - Contributors o Lyell’s Principle of Geology book o Malthus’s Essay on the Principles of Population  Competition for resources - Galapagos Islands – why so many diff. organisms occupy one small island cluster? - Artificial Selection o Selective breeding of animals/plants to ensure that certain desirable traits appear at higher frequency in successive generations - Natural Selection o Evolutionary process by which alleles that increase the likelihood of survival and the reproduction output of the individuals that carry them become more common in subsequent generations - On the Origins of Species o Descent w/ modification  Evolutionary alteration and diversification of ancestral species Variation in Natural Population - Phenotypic Variation o Differences in appearance/function – that if based on heritability – are passed from generation to generation o Possibilities  Different genotype exhibit same phenotype  Same genotype exhibit different phenotype o In population, cause by: 1) genetic difference 2) environmental factors 3) genetics & enviro.  Only genetically based variation is subject to evolutionary change o Quantitative Variation  Individuals differ in small, incremental ways  E.g. mass, toe length of students in biology  Bar Graphs  Describe Population o Variability

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 Broad, low curve – a lot of variation  High, narrow – little variation o Mean  average value of character o Qualitative Variation  2 or more discrete states, NO intermediate form  E.g. geese are either blue or white o Polymorphism  Discrete variants of a character  E.g. type A, B, AB, O, number of stripes, background colour Genetic Variation o Sources  Production of new alleles  Rearrangement of existing alleles o Measuring  Gel Electrophoresis  Seperates 2 or more forms of a given protein if they differ significantly in shape, mass, or net electrical charge o Identifying protein infer genetic variation at the locus coding for that protein

Natural Selection Shapes Genetic Variability by Favouring Some Traits over Others Natural Selection o process by which beneficial, heritable traits become more common in subsequent generations (changing allele frequency)  therefore, doesn’t agree w/ HW equilibrium o no effect on traits that appear during an individual’s post-reproductive life (ex. Huntington disease) - rate of loss of lethal alleles declines as more and more lethal alleles are found in heterozygous individuals - Relative Fitness o # of surviving offspring that an individual produces compared with the number left by others in the population (by the other allele) o Individuals with the best phenotype have relatively more offspring than those with less beneficial phenotypes  So, best phenotypes don’t only reproduce - Modes of Natural Selection 1) Directional Selection

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Occur when , individual’s near one end of the phenotypic spectrum have the highest relative fitness - Shifts trait toward favoured extreme - Mean shifts - common 2) Stabilizing Selection - Occur when, individuals expressing intermediate phenotypes have the highest relative fitness - Eliminating extremes,  genetic and phenotypic variation,  frequency of intermediate phenotypes - Favours mean - most common 3) Disruptive Selection - Occur when, extreme phenotypes have higher relative fitness than intermediate phenotypes - Extreme phenotypes more common  polymorphism -  mean - Less common Adaptation and Evolutionary Constraints - Adaptive Trait o Product of natural selection that  relative fitness of an organism in its environment - Adaptation o Accumulation of adaptive traits over time - Constraints of Adaptive Evolution o no organism can be perfectly adapted to its environment b/c environments change over time o historical:  natural selection can only affect existing genetic variation  natural selection acts on mutations and genetic variation  but b/c mutations is rare, natural selection works primarily on alleles that have been present for many generations  thus, adaptive changes in the morphology of an organism are based on small modifications of existing structures o e.g. 4-footed humans  2-footed humans  natural selection didn’t produce new skeletal design just modified existing traits