Upload
others
View
6
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
EVOLUTION: ADAPTATION AND NATURAL SELECTION
Evolution
• A logical consequence of reproduction, heredity, and ecology
The basic observations and questions:
• There are at least 3,000,000 species and much variation between and within species--diversity
• Each species in general shows characteristics that help it live its lifestyle--adaptation
• How and why did so many types of organisms appear?
• How and why is each species so well adapted to its environment?
Hypothesis: Special creation
• Each species is created to match a pattern, called an “archetype”
• Each archetype fits part of a plan
• Variation occurs by random error in reproducing the archetype
• Origin of this hypothesis: Greek philosophers Pythagoras, Plato
• Modern support: Judeo-Christian religions (plan implies a planner)
“New” observations
Taxonomy (Linnaeus, Darwin, and others)
• Listed and classified plants and animals
• Showed that species fall into groups sharing characteristics, andthat there are well defined hierarchies of relationships --taxa
Paleontology (Wallace, Lamarck and others)
• Study of fossils--signs and remnants of ancient life preserved in rocks
• Showed gradual increase in the number and complexity of species,extinct species, appearance of new species, relationship between ancient and present-day species--history of life
• Wallace: whenever a new species appears, a similar species is already there
Hypothesis: Organic evolution
Species appear by evolving from previous species--”descent withmodification”
Species are selected to fit a particular lifestyle through preferred reproduction, survival
Explains:Diversity--one species gives rise to many, each of which give riseto more…”divergence”
Adaptation--selection of traits promotes reproduction, survival
Taxa--related organisms diverged from a “common ancestor”
Fossils, history of life--inferred history represents a real history
Adaptation through natural selection
Darwin, Wallace theory:
• Variation within a population occursrandomly
• Traits and their variation are inherited byprogeny
• Interaction of organisms with theenvironment causes a selection
of “better adapted” type for survival,reproduction
• Population of progeny tends to resemblethe “better adapted” parents
Random mutations provide the basic variation
Base substitutions, additions, deletions change amino-acid sequences(leading to changes in protein function) and control of transcription
Chromosome deletions, inversions, transversions, duplications changehow a gene is expressed
Many examples come from the study of Drosophila (fruit flies): e.g.,bithorax…
and people: e.g., hemophilia (loss of gene for clotting factor), xeroderma pigmentosum (loss of gene for DNA repair)
(It is more difficult to find random mutations to positive traits, butconsider sickle-cell anemia--protection against malaria)
How likely are mutations? Depends on the gene and the mutation, But a range is 104-1010 mutations/gene-generation (average 106)
HbS
malaria
Other forms of inherited variation occur
Recombination through gamete fusion and meiosis increases variety
Consider a population of haploid organisms with two genotypes:
AB, ab
asexual sexual reproduction:mitosis fusion, meiosis
AB, ab AB, ab, Ab, aB
Diploidy increases variety through heterozygosity: heterozygosity gives intermediate phenotypes, “storage” of recessive alleles
AABB, AaBB, aaBB, AABb, AaBb, aaBb, AAbb, Aabb, aabb
An agricultural example shows how selection can change a population
Corn seeds: protein and oil content per seed varies normally around a mean
U. Illinois, 1896-1945: seeds from 200-300 plants selected for high or low protein content or high or low oil content
Selected for:
High protein
High oil
Low protein
Low oil
% of seedmass thatis proteinor oil
generations
Variation in oil and protein was too much, too fast to be provided by mutation--this shows the effect of recombination of previouslyunexpressed alleles
Later experiments showed the reverse selection--allele variationpersisted after 80 generations of selection
Selected for:
High protein
High oil
Low protein
Low oil
% of seedmass thatis proteinor oil
generations
Natural selection
Favors (in theory):
•Survival to reproductive age (feeding, predator protection, abiotic resistance)
•Mating frequency (recognition, reproductive organs)
•Fertility (number of young/female)
•Embryonic survival (parental protection, coordination of development)
Recall the different strategies: high fertility (insects, fish, ash trees) orhigh survival (mammals, birds, coconuts)
Selection can change allele frequencies in different ways
Stabilizing selection influences human birth weight:
Directional selection produced longhorn cattle in America:
(Longhorns were able better to deter predators)
Disruptive selection results in two populations of West African seedcrackers:
Is evolution occurring in a population? Here is one test:
Population genetics
A population’s genetic composition can be defined by a set of allele frequencies
p = frequency of allele A in population (total number of allele A / sum of all alleles in population)
q = frequency of allele a in population
p = (2NAA + NAa)/2N q = (2Naa + NAa)/2N
Where NAA = number of individuals of genotype AA NAa = number of individuals of genotype Aa Naa = number of individuals of genotype aa N = total population
“Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium” shows the genotypes connected with allele frequencies p and q
In one generation of random mating and random survival ofof the offspring, the populationreaches Hardy-WeinbergEquilibrium:
NAA = Np2,
NAa = 2pq, and Naa = Nq2
Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium applies when a population is NOT evolving
•Mating is random
•Population size in large (in small populations, random choice of mates mayexclude certain genotypes--called “genetic drift”)
•There is no mutation
•There is no gene flow (movement in or out of the population)
•Survival is random
SO…
If a population is NOT in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, then it IS evolvingat a significant rate through one of these processes
Summary
Evolution through random mutation, recombination, and natural selection is the accepted modern explanation for the history and diversity of life
Selection works on phenotypes, not genotypes
Selection can stabilize, change, or disrupt the composition of a set of alleles
Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium describes the allele frequencies ofa population that is not evolving; it is a test for evolution in progress