BIOL 1082 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Sickle-Cell Disease, Heterozygote Advantage, Allele Frequency

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6 Jun 2018
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Ch. 20 LO
Genes within populations Reading: Concepts 20.1-20.9
1. Describe the interactions between beak size in Darwin’s finches, their food, and climate changes in
their environment, explaining how this is an example of evolution by natural selection.
Beak size varied according to the food available. Climate and rainfall determined the
food available
If a species experience drought this meant that less soft small food was available and
that the bird with the larger beaks survived. This is an example of how natural selection
affects certain trait of Darwin's finches.
1. Explain the importance of variation for evolution, describing the causes and measures of variation
in populations.
Without variation in the alleles there would be no natural selection to occur and no
phenotype would dominate over another and there would be not evolution
Variation allows evolution.
1. Explain Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium and why it is so important, especially since all of its
assumptions seem so unrealistic and difficult to meet in the real world.
This equilibrium happens when there is no variation in alleles
It is so important because it is used to determine whether or not evolution has occurred
in a population.
It is so unrealistic because the criteria are very hard to meet.
1. Solve problems where you are given partial information on either the allele frequencies or
genotype frequencies in a population in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.
Know how to do this
2. Define the processes that bring about evolutionary change, giving examples of each.
Genetic drift- random events
Genetic flow- migration
Random mating
Mutations
Natural selection
3. Define genetic drift, listing both its causes and results. Distinguish between founder effects and
bottleneck effects.
Random fluctuations in the frequency of the appearance of a gene in a small isolated
population, presumably owing to chance rather than natural selection.
Causes: founder effect or bottle neck effect
Results: loss of alleles in population or lose of a phenotype
1. Define relative fitness, explaining what it is relative to.
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