BIOL 112 Chapter Notes - Chapter 23: Allele Frequency, Neutral Theory Of Molecular Evolution, Daphne Major

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A common misconception is that organisms evolve during their lifetimes. Important: natural selection acts on individuals, but only populations. Consider, for example, a population of medium ground finches on daphne. During a drought, large beaked birds were more likely to crack large seeds and survive. Drier the environ, bigger the seeds, shorter and more compact the beak needs to be to crack the seeds. The finch population evolved by natural selection environmental pressure leads. Microevolution: change in allele frequencies (p and q of the hardy-weinberg population genetics) in a population over generations. Natural selection is the only mechanism of adaptive evolution, improving the match between organisms and their environment. Caused by differences in genes or other dna segments. Phenotype is the product of inherited genotype and environmental influences. Natural selection can only act on variation with a genetic component. Monogenic traits: phenotypic differences are determined by a single gene and can be classified on an either-or basis.

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