7B: Populations & evolution Flashcards

1
Q

What is the definition of a species?

A

A group of similar organisms that can reproduce to give fertile offspring

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2
Q

What is a population?

A

A group of organisms of the same species living in a particular area at a particular time

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3
Q

Define evolution

A

Change in allele frequency over time

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4
Q

Define gene pool

A

The complete range of alleles for all genes in all the organisms in a population

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5
Q

Define allele frequency

A

The proportion of a particular type of allele in a population

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6
Q

What are the 5 conditions that must be met for the Hardy-Weinberg principle?

A
  • No mutations
  • No movement in/out of the population
  • No selection
  • Random mating
  • Large population
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7
Q

What does the Hardy-Weinberg principle predict?

A

It predicts that the frequencies of alleles in a population won’t change from one generation to the next (this is only true under certain conditions)

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8
Q

What is the Hardy-Weinberg equation?

A

p + q = 1

Where:
p = frequency of dominant allele
q = frequency of recessive allele

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9
Q

In Hardy-Weinberg what is 2pq?

A

2pq = frequency of heterozygous genotype

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10
Q

In Hardy-Weinberg what is p²?

A

p² = frequency of homozygous dominant genotype

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11
Q

In Hardy-Weinberg what is q²?

A

q² = frequency of homozygous recessive genotype

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12
Q

Brown fur coloring is dominant to skewbald fur coloring in horses. If you have 168 brown horses in a population of 200 horses. What is the predicted frequency of homozygous dominants?

A

36%

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13
Q

Brown fur coloring is dominant to skewbald fur coloring in horses. If you have 168 brown horses in a population of 200 horses. What is the predicted frequency of heterozygotes?

A

48%

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14
Q

Brown fur coloring is dominant to skewbald fur coloring in horses. If you have 168 brown horses in a population of 200 horses. What is the predicted frequency of homozygous recessive?

A

16%

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15
Q

The frequency of cystic fibrosis (ff) in the UK is currently around 1 birth in every 2500. From this information estimate the percentage of people in the UK that are cystic fibrosis carriers.

A

To do this you need to find 2pq.

  1. ff = q² = 1 / 2500 = 0.0004
    so, q = 0.02
  2. p = 1 - q
    p = 1 - 0.02 = 0.98
  3. 2pq = 2 x 0.02 x 0.98 = 0.039
    The frequency of Ff is 0.039, so the % in the UK population is 3.9%
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16
Q

What is variation?

A

The differences that exist between individuals

17
Q

What does variation within a species result in?

A

A wide range of different phenotypes

18
Q

What is the main source of genetic variation?

A

Mutations (when changes in the DNA base sequence lead to the production of new alleles)

19
Q

What are 2 other ways that genetic variation can happen?

A
  1. During meiosis (through crossing over and independent segregation)
  2. Random fertilisation
20
Q

What is the definition of evolution?

A

Changes in the allele frequency of a population over time

21
Q

Name 3 selection pressures that create a struggle for survival

A

Predation, disease and competition

22
Q

Why does a population show a wide range of phenotypes?

A

Due to genetic and environmental variation

23
Q

Describe natural selection

A
  • Selection pressures create a struggle for survival.
  • Organisms with phenotypes providing selective advantages are likely to produce more offspring and pass on their favourable alleles to the next generation.
  • The effect of this differential reproductive success on the allele frequencies within a gene pool
24
Q

What are 3 types of natural selection?

A

Stabilising, directional and disruptive (they affect allele frequency in different ways)

25
Q

Describe stabilising selection

A

Where individuals with alleles for average phenotypes are more likely to survive and reproduce

  • Occurs when environment is NOT changing
  • Reduces the range of possible characteristics
  • Results in a narrow bell curve
26
Q

Describe directional selection

A

Where individuals with alleles for one extreme phenotype are more likely to survive and reproduce

  • Could be a response to an environmental change
  • Results in the bell curve shifting in the direction of selection
27
Q

Describe disruptive selection

A

Where individuals with alleles for extreme phenotypes at either end of the range are more likely to survive and reproduce

  • Occurs when the environment favours more than ones phenotype
  • Is the opposite of stabilising selection because characteristics towards the middle of the range are lost
28
Q

What is speciation?

A

The development of a new species from an existing species

29
Q

When does speciation occur?

A

It occurs when populations of the same species become reproductively isolated

30
Q

What is reproductive isolation and how does it occur?

A

When members of the same species can no longer interbreed to produce fertile offspring. It occurs due to changes in allele frequency causing changes in phenotype.

31
Q

What is geographical isolation?

A

When a physical barrier, e.g a flood or an earthquake, divides a population of a species, causing some individuals to become separated from the main population

32
Q

Describe sympatric speciation

A
  • Does NOT require geographical isolation

- Random mutations can occur in a population causing some to be reproductively isolated

33
Q

Describe allopatric speciation

A
  • Requires geographical isolation, so populations will experience different selection pressures + conditions
  • This leads to different changes in allele frequencies, which will cause differences to accumulate in the gene pools and will eventually cause changes in phenotypic frequencies
    = reproductive isolation
34
Q

Name and describe 3 changes that can cause reproductive isolation

A

Seasonal - individuals of the same pop. develop different flowering/mating seasons or become sexually active at different times of the year

Mechanical - changes in genitalia prevent successful mating

Behavioural - a group of individuals develop courtship rituals that aren’t attractive to the main population

35
Q

What is evolution by genetic drift and in what type of population does it normally occur?

A

When chance, rather than environmental factors, dictates which individuals survive, breed and pass on their alleles. In smaller populations

36
Q

Describe how evolution by genetic drift occurs

A
  • Individuals within a pop. show variation in their genotypes (e.g. A and B)
  • By chance, the allele for one genotype (B) is passed on to the offspring more often than others
  • So the number of individuals with the allele increases
  • Changes in allele frequency in two isolated populations could eventually lead to reproductive isolation and speciation
37
Q

Evolution by genetic drift usually has a _____ effect in _____ populations where _____ has a greater influence.

A

Evolution by genetic drift usually has a GREATER effect in SMALLER populations where CHANCE has a greater influence.

38
Q

What is the diversity of life on earth a result of?

A

Speciation and evolutionary change over millions of years