EEB 2244 Lecture 6: Evolution and Ecology

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Evolution is change in genetic composition of a population over time, often measured in. Phenotype is the observable traits of an organism, can include morphological. Many examples of continuous variation can be seen every day, like corn and pepper. Over time evolution can result in phenotypic traits that are beneficial, deleterious or. Larger gene pool, greater reproductive rate, stronger selection pressure = faster. Phenotypic variation that is inherited is the basis for evolution. Populations with more inheritable phenotypic variation have tend to evolve more. Genes are essentially regions of dna coding for proteins. Alleles are the different forms that genes may take. Phenotypes can be determined by just one gene or many genes at once in which case we say it is polygenic. Most traits are polygenic, indicating that they are influenced by more than one gene. The result of many genes acting upon the phenotype of an individual is a continuous variation of phenotypes.

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