All Study Guides General Biology II Unit 12
🐾 General Biology II Unit 12 – Mechanisms of EvolutionEvolution is the process of genetic change in populations over time. This unit explores the mechanisms driving evolution, including mutation, genetic drift, gene flow, and natural selection. These forces shape the genetic makeup of populations and lead to the diversity of life we see today.
Understanding evolution is crucial for biology. It explains how species adapt to their environments, how new species form, and provides insights into the history of life on Earth. This knowledge has practical applications in medicine, agriculture, and conservation.
Key Concepts
Evolution involves changes in the genetic composition of populations over time
Evolutionary forces include mutation, genetic drift, gene flow, and natural selection
Genetic variation arises from mutations and sexual reproduction
Mutations can be beneficial, neutral, or harmful
Sexual reproduction shuffles alleles, creating new combinations in offspring
Natural selection acts on phenotypic variation, favoring traits that enhance survival and reproduction
Differential survival and reproduction of individuals with certain traits leads to changes in allele frequencies over generations
Population genetics studies the distribution and changes in allele frequencies within populations
The Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium describes a non-evolving population
Deviations from the equilibrium indicate evolutionary forces at work
Speciation is the formation of new species through reproductive isolation
Allopatric speciation occurs when populations are geographically separated
Sympatric speciation occurs without geographic isolation
Evidence for evolution comes from various fields, including fossils, comparative anatomy, and molecular biology
Evolutionary principles have applications in medicine, agriculture, and conservation biology
Evolutionary Forces
Mutation introduces new genetic variation into populations
Point mutations involve changes in single nucleotides (substitutions, insertions, deletions)
Chromosomal mutations involve larger-scale changes (duplications, inversions, translocations)
Genetic drift is the random change in allele frequencies due to chance events
Founder effect occurs when a small group establishes a new population
Bottleneck effect occurs when a population undergoes a drastic reduction in size
Gene flow is the transfer of alleles between populations through migration or interbreeding
Gene flow can introduce new alleles or change existing allele frequencies
Natural selection is the differential survival and reproduction of individuals with certain traits
Directional selection favors one extreme of a trait (antibiotic resistance in bacteria)
Stabilizing selection favors intermediate values of a trait (human birth weight)
Disruptive selection favors both extremes of a trait (beak sizes in finches)
Sexual selection is a type of natural selection based on mating success
Intrasexual selection involves competition within a sex (male deer antlers)
Intersexual selection involves mate choice by the opposite sex (peacock tail feathers)
Genetic Variation
Genetic variation is the foundation for evolutionary change
Mutations are the ultimate source of new genetic variation
Spontaneous mutations occur naturally due to DNA replication errors or environmental factors
Induced mutations are caused by mutagens (UV radiation, chemicals)
Sexual reproduction generates new combinations of alleles through meiosis and fertilization
Independent assortment of chromosomes during meiosis I
Random fertilization of gametes
Recombination during meiosis I creates new combinations of alleles on chromosomes
Crossing over between homologous chromosomes
Polyploidy (having more than two sets of chromosomes) can lead to instant speciation in plants
Horizontal gene transfer can introduce new genetic material from one species to another
Bacterial conjugation, transformation, and transduction
Viral-mediated gene transfer in eukaryotes
Natural Selection in Action
Natural selection acts on phenotypic variation, which is often based on genetic variation
Fitness is the ability of an individual to survive and reproduce in a given environment
Relative fitness compares the fitness of one genotype to another
Adaptation is a trait that enhances an organism's fitness in a specific environment
Camouflage in prey animals (peppered moths)
Mimicry in harmless species to resemble harmful ones (viceroy butterfly mimicking monarch butterfly)
Convergent evolution is the independent evolution of similar traits in unrelated species
Wings in birds, bats, and insects
Streamlined body shapes in aquatic animals (sharks, dolphins, ichthyosaurs)
Coevolution is the reciprocal evolutionary change in interacting species
Predator-prey relationships (cheetahs and gazelles)
Host-parasite relationships (humans and influenza viruses)
Artificial selection is human-directed selection for desired traits
Domestication of plants and animals (corn, dogs)
Selective breeding for specific characteristics (high-yielding crops, docile behavior in livestock)
Population Genetics
Population genetics studies the distribution and changes in allele frequencies within populations
The Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium describes a non-evolving population
Assumptions: large population size, no mutation, no migration, no selection, random mating
Allele frequencies remain constant across generations when the assumptions are met
The Hardy-Weinberg equation (p 2 + 2 p q + q 2 = 1 p^2 + 2pq + q^2 = 1 p 2 + 2 pq + q 2 = 1 ) calculates genotype frequencies from allele frequencies
p p p is the frequency of the dominant allele, q q q is the frequency of the recessive allele
Deviations from the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium indicate evolutionary forces at work
Changes in allele frequencies over time
Excess or deficiency of heterozygotes compared to expected frequencies
Genetic drift has a greater impact on small populations
Alleles can be lost or fixed more rapidly by chance events
Effective population size (N e N_e N e ) is the number of individuals that contribute genes to the next generation
Smaller than the actual population size due to factors like unequal sex ratios or fluctuating population sizes
Inbreeding increases the frequency of homozygotes and can lead to inbreeding depression
Reduced fitness due to the expression of deleterious recessive alleles
Speciation Processes
Speciation is the formation of new species through reproductive isolation
Prezygotic barriers prevent the formation of a zygote
Habitat isolation: species occupy different habitats (different soil types for plants)
Temporal isolation: species have different breeding seasons or times (diurnal vs. nocturnal)
Behavioral isolation: species have different courtship behaviors or mating rituals (bird songs)
Mechanical isolation: incompatible reproductive structures (flower shapes and pollinator mouthparts)
Gametic isolation: gametes fail to attract, recognize, or fuse with each other (sea urchin sperm and eggs)
Postzygotic barriers affect the survival or reproduction of hybrids
Hybrid inviability: hybrids do not develop properly or survive to adulthood (mule)
Hybrid sterility: hybrids are viable but cannot produce functional gametes (liger)
Hybrid breakdown: hybrids are fertile, but their offspring have reduced fitness (second-generation hybrids)
Allopatric speciation occurs when populations are geographically separated
Vicariance: a physical barrier divides a population (formation of the Isthmus of Panama)
Dispersal: individuals colonize a new area (Galápagos finches)
Sympatric speciation occurs without geographic isolation
Polyploidy: instant speciation through genome duplication (many plant species)
Habitat or host shift: populations adapt to different niches within the same area (apple maggot fly)
Sexual selection: divergent mate preferences lead to reproductive isolation (cichlid fish in Lake Victoria)
Evidence for Evolution
Fossils provide a record of past life forms and evolutionary changes over time
Transitional fossils show intermediate stages between ancestral and derived forms (Archaeopteryx)
Fossil sequences demonstrate gradual changes in morphology (horse evolution)
Comparative anatomy reveals similarities and differences among species
Homologous structures have a common evolutionary origin but may serve different functions (human arm, bat wing, whale flipper)
Analogous structures have similar functions but evolved independently (bird wing, insect wing)
Vestigial structures have lost their original function but are retained in reduced form (human appendix, whale hip bones)
Comparative embryology shows similarities in early developmental stages among related species
Pharyngeal pouches in vertebrate embryos (human, chicken, fish)
Molecular biology provides evidence of common ancestry and evolutionary relationships
DNA and protein sequence similarities (cytochrome c in various species)
Phylogenetic trees based on molecular data (mitochondrial DNA, ribosomal RNA)
Biogeography studies the distribution of species across space and time
Endemic species are unique to a specific geographic area (kangaroos in Australia)
Convergent evolution in similar environments (succulent plants in deserts worldwide)
Experimental evolution demonstrates evolutionary changes in real-time
Bacterial resistance to antibiotics
Artificial selection experiments (Drosophila, E. coli)
Applications and Implications
Medicine: understanding the evolution of pathogens and the development of drug resistance
Antibiotic resistance in bacteria (MRSA)
Antiviral drug resistance in viruses (HIV, influenza)
Agriculture: crop improvement through artificial selection and genetic engineering
High-yielding, disease-resistant crop varieties (Green Revolution)
Genetically modified organisms (Bt corn, Golden Rice)
Conservation biology: preserving biodiversity and managing endangered species
Genetic diversity as a measure of population health
Evolutionary potential and adaptation to changing environments
Bioremediation: using evolved microorganisms to clean up environmental pollutants
Oil-degrading bacteria (Deepwater Horizon oil spill)
Heavy metal-tolerant plants (phytoremediation)
Evolutionary psychology: understanding human behavior and cognition in an evolutionary context
Mate selection preferences (facial symmetry, waist-to-hip ratio)
Altruism and cooperation (kin selection, reciprocal altruism)
Evolutionary algorithms: applying evolutionary principles to solve complex problems in computer science
Optimization and machine learning (genetic algorithms, evolutionary programming)
Science education: promoting scientific literacy and critical thinking skills
Teaching the evidence for evolution and the nature of science
Addressing misconceptions and pseudoscientific claims (intelligent design, creation science)