punctuated equilibrium
DESCRIPTION
Punctuated Equilibrium. Verses Gradualism. What Drives Evolution. 1-Isolation. Temporal Geographic Behavioral. 2-Artificial Selection. Did not drive evolution!!!. 2-Natural Selection. 2-Natural Selection. 3-Variation & Heritability. Sources of Genetic Variation. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Punctuated Equilibrium
Verses Gradualism
What Drives Evolution
1-Isolation
TemporalGeographicBehavioral
2-Artificial Selection
Did not drive evolution!!!
2-Natural Selection
2-Natural Selection
3-Variation & Heritability
Sources of Genetic Variation
Mutations – 300 mutations in our DNA that are different from our parents mutations• Only matter if they can be passed to next generation – skin cancer
Sexual Reproduction – remixes the genes your parents provide into new combinations of paired alleles
Lateral Gene Transfer – only in single celled creatures but significant to all evolution and current resistance to drugs.
Single Gene (allele selection) Vs Polygenic Traits (phenotype selection) & how natural selection works on them.
Type of Selection for Polygenic Traits: Directional / Stabilizing / Disruptive
Founder Population
Bottleneck
Genetic Drift
Evolution Vs Genetic Equilibrium
Genetic Equilibrium = allele frequency in a gene pool does not change – sexual reproduction does not change change frequency.
Hardy Weinberg principle = predicts allele frequency for a population and if it is wrong than it is likely that evolution is taking place.
Disturbances to Equilibrium:1. Nonrandom mating – mate selection2. Small Population Size3. Immigration & Emigration4. Mutations5. Natural Selection6. Look at Darwin’s Finches pages 496-497
Molecular Evolution
Molecular Clocks• Uses rates of neutral mutations in stretches of DNA to estimate the time that
two species have evolved independently of each other – page 499
Gene Duplication• Gene Families such as Hox genes• New copy genes evolve without changing the original
Hox Genes: Mutations to this gene is significant to the body plan
Dark Matter: Switches
Microevolution & Macroevolution
Mass Extinctions5 recorded mass extinctions1. Ordovician (440mya) - 50% of animal families2. Devonian (360mya) - 30% of animal families3. Permian (250mya) - 50% of animal families, including 95% of
marine species4. Triassic (210mya) - 35% of animal families5. Cretaceous (65mya) - 60% of animal species
Recovery Time6. Ordovician - 25 million years7. Devonian - 30 million years8. Permian/Triassic - 100 million years9. Cretaceous - 20 million years
Many other minor extinctionsBackground Extinction
Mass Extinctions
Current - Holocene Extinction