BIOL 1070 Lecture 3: Variability and Variation

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Likely the #1 cause of genetic variation. Don"t occur to benefit the organism, it is entirely random: crossing over and recombination errors, genetic variation, alleles, survival of the fittest aka natural selection. Environment doesn"t cause mutation, and individuals don"t adapt themselves. The individuals best suited to the environment survive and reproduce, which leads to their genes and specific phenotype to survive and continue. Base pair substitution in dna sequences: chromosome mutations. Rearrangement of fusing of chromosome segments; alter gene order: gene duplications (unequal crossing over) Duplication of a short stretch of dna, creating an additional copy: genome duplications (polyploidy) Addition of a complete set of chromosomes. They are non-random differences in survival and/or reproduction among individual entities on the basis of differences in heritable characteristics. Genetic drift: evolution by chance due to sampling error. Bottleneck: evolution by chance due to random event (such as a natural disaster that wipes out much of the population)

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