topic 8 : origins of genetic variaiton Flashcards

1
Q

what are the sources of new genetic variation

A
  • mutations
  • crossing over (metaphase/anaphase 1)
  • independant assortment (metaphase/anaphase 1 & 2)
  • random fertilisation
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2
Q

what is an allele

A

an alternative form of a gene

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3
Q

what does it mean if an allele is dominant

A

an allele that is always expressed the phenotype, even if only one of them is present (heterozygous) - present in homoxygous and heterozygous

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4
Q

what does it mean if an allele is recessive

A

an allele that is only expressed in the phenotype if two copies are present (homozygous) or if there is only one of the allele

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5
Q

what does phenotype mean

A

the observable characteristics of an organism

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6
Q

what does genotype mean

A

all the alleles present in a cell of an organism

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7
Q

what does codominance mean

A

both of the alleles contribute to the phenotype without mixing

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8
Q

what are multiple alleles

A

more than 2 possible versions of an allele

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9
Q

what are chi squared tests used for

A

used when both variables are categorical (eg. height gourps at short/average/tall and gender male /female)

also normally used to check for autosomal gene linkage

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10
Q

what does autosomal gene linkage mean

A

when 2 genes on the same chromosome are linked and inherited as if they were the same gene (eg. brown eyes and brown hair), not sex-linked

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11
Q

what happens if the closer the 2 genes in autosomal link are located

A

then they are less likely to be separated during crossing over (the characteristic will be carried out)

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12
Q

what does sex linked mean

A

they are on the X chromosome (this is why some health conditions are more common in men because they don’t have two X chromosomes -> only need one copy for it to be expressed

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13
Q

what are two examples of sex linked conditions

A

haemophilia (absence of clotting factors)
red-green colourblindness

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14
Q

why do frequencies of alleles change over time?

A

this is due to natural selection, which drives evolution

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15
Q

why does natural selection occur

A

it occurs due to various seleciton pressures

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16
Q

what is natual selection

A

process through which population of living organisms change and adapt

17
Q

what are the three types of natural selection

A

stabilizing, disruptive and directional

18
Q

what is stabilising natural selection

A

conserves phenotypes already existing in the population and hence reduces variation. selection is agains the extreme (more of the average features)

19
Q

what is disruptive natural selection

A

increased diversity in a population. common when conditions are varied and small sub population evolve different phenotypes based on these conditions. Selection is for extreme phenotype (completely opposite)

20
Q

what is directonal natural selection

A

normal natural selection which shows change from one phenotype to another which happens to be more advantageous for the envrionment

21
Q

what is a population bottle neck

A

a serious event that causes the population to reduce by at least 50% resulting in a dramtic change to the gene pool and allele frequencies and hence genetic diversity.

22
Q

what is genetic bottle neck?

A

sharp reduction in the size of a population due to environmental catastrophes like earthquakes, floods or diseases or human destruction like habitat destruction, overhunting or genocide

23
Q

what is the main difference between genetic bottlenecking and natural selection

A

genetic bottlenecking is like natural selection, but it happens much quicker and it is much more extreme
natural selection favours more advantageous characteristics and the population is bigger.

24
Q

what happens if there is less genetic diversity in a population

A

they are less likely to survive when met with different diseases or environmental conditions

25
Q

what is founder effect

A

loss of genetic variaitonw hen a small gorup of individuals are isolated and they form a new population- . they evolve n have allele frequencies tthat are not representative of the original pop.

26
Q

what is genetic drift

A

the allele frequencies are changing due to chance and not be a specific selection pressure.

27
Q

compare and contrast stabilising selection with disruptive selection

A

differences :
-n stabilising selection selects against the extreme phenotypes/disruptive selection selects against the mean/median phenotypes
- stabilising selection maintains 1 population/disruptive selection results in 2 distinct populations

similarities ;
- both change the frequency of alleles
- both select against phenotypes (reduces the variation)

28
Q

In 1994, there were only 20 gilbert’s potoroo individuals, 12 of which were in a captive colony.
a captive breeding programme was set up using :
- four adult females and one young female
- one adult male, two young males and one young male sill in its mother’s pouch.

explain why allele frequencies may cause problems in this population of potoroos

A
  • population size is small due to the genetic bottle/founders effect
  • gene pool is very small/genetic variation is reduced
  • there is an increased likelihood of interbreeding which can cause problems.
29
Q

state what is meant by the term biodiversity

A

the variation of alleles in a gene pool

30
Q

explain why, in 2016, the genetic biodiversity of the lynx population in the area where they had been reintroduced was much lower than in the protected area

A
  • only a small number was reintroduced so there is more interbreeding
  • casuing a limited gene pool
31
Q

what are the conditions for the hardy weinberg equation

A
  • no mutation
  • random mating
  • large population
  • no migration (in or out))
  • no selection pressure