topic 8.3 - gene pools Flashcards

1
Q

what is a gene pool

A

the sum of the alleles of all the genes of all the individuals in a population

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2
Q

what is meant by allele frequency

A

how often an allele appears in the population

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3
Q

how does selection affect allele frequencies

A
  • some phenotypes make it more likely that an organism will survive & reproduce successfully
  • the alleles that gave the adv are more likely to be passed on
  • frequency of the allele in the population will increase (more individuals will show the characteristic)
  • some alleles won’t be passed on & lost
  • rate of change is usually very slow
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4
Q

how can a new species be formed

A
  • by directional and disruptive selection
  • it can result in enough differences for a new species to be formed - speciation
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5
Q

stabilising selection

A
  • acts against change by making favourable characteristics more common in an unchanging environment
  • reduces variety
  • maintains continuity in a population
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6
Q

disruptive selection

A
  • leads to change by making extreme values of a characteristic more common
  • this lead to two clear forms in the population (speciation)
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7
Q

genetic drift

A
  • change can sometimes be due to chance, not selection
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8
Q

what is genetic drift

A
  • changes in frequencies of alleles can be due to chance rather than selection
  • chance can be due to random sexual reproduction or to accidents preventing reproduction
  • alleles are not passed from a population in a way that reflects their frequency in the population
  • the effects will be greater in small populations and may lead to complete loss of an allele if it isn’t passed on
  • genetic drift is not directional
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9
Q

population bottlenecks

A
  • when the size of a population is dramatically reduced by an environmental disaster, a new disease, hunting by humans/predators or habitat destruction
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10
Q

how can allele frequencies be influenced by population bottleneck

A
  • it causes a severe decrease in the gene pool of the population
  • many gene variants present in the original population are lost, so the gene pool shrinks
  • only a small number of individuals survive a major event
  • frequency of alleles is different within the surviving population
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11
Q

founder effect

A
  • the loss of genetic variation when a small number of individuals leave the main population and set up a separate new population
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12
Q

how can allele frequencies be influenced by the founder effect

A
  • the frequency of alleles is different within the new population
  • any unusual genes in the founder members of the new population may become amplified as the population grows
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13
Q

Hardy-Weinburg

A
  • predicts the frequencies of alleles in a population will remain constant unless factors act to affect them
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14
Q

what are the assumptions made about the Hardy-Weinburg equilibrium

A
  • there are no random mutations
  • there is random mating
  • the population is very large
  • there is no migration
  • there is no selection pressure
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15
Q

how do mutations affect allele frequency

A
  • mutations are a source of new alleles in a population
  • do not happen often as we have constant checking mechanisms in place but there are so many cells that they are bound to occur at some stage
  • in animals, only mutations in germ line cells will affect alleles of next generation
  • mutations in somatic body cells will die with their owner
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16
Q

how does non-random mating affect allele frequency changes

A
  • sexual selection occurs where mates choose individuals based on certain characteristics
  • humans can interfere with some populations via selective breeding
  • inbreeding in some population occurs - this increases the frequency of homozygotes
17
Q

how does gene flow affect allele frequency

A
  • allele frequency can be affected by alleles entering or leaving a population via migration
  • immigration could introduce new alleles to a population while emigration could cause some alleles to be lost from the population
  • gene flow can also arise due to dispersal of seeds, pollen or spores
18
Q

how does genetic drift affect allele frequency

A
  • in small populations you can get a much smaller gene pool and allele frequencies can change dramatically
19
Q
A