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Notes BIOL 1134 Chpater 1 - 2

The document discusses biological evolution and key figures like Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace. It covers concepts such as natural selection, genetic variation, inheritance of traits, and how evolution can change populations over multiple generations through these mechanisms.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
21 views5 pages

Notes BIOL 1134 Chpater 1 - 2

The document discusses biological evolution and key figures like Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace. It covers concepts such as natural selection, genetic variation, inheritance of traits, and how evolution can change populations over multiple generations through these mechanisms.

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hacondley
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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● Biological evolution

● Change in allele frequencies within a population across generations


● 5 forces of evolutionary change
○ Selection
■ Natural
● Abiotic
○ Temperature, drought, flood
● Biotic
○ Food availability, competition in your species
■ Sexual
○ Mutation
■ Natural consequence of copying DNA
■ Undirected, random changes
■ Can occur anywhere in the gene
○ Random genetic drift
■ Random changes in allele frequency due to random occurrence of death
○ Migration
○ Non-random, assortative mating
■ Meeting with individuals with the same geno/phenotype
■ Meeting with individuals with the same geno/phenotype
■ Alters genotype frequency but not necessarily allele frequency in a
population
○ Which increase genetic variation and which decrease genetic variation?
● Charles Darwin
○ Family was in the science field
○ Good education
○ Began studying theology
○ Interested in natural history
○ Mapping coast of south america in 1830’s; five years
○ Visited Galapagos for three weeks
■ Had giant tortoises
■ Can go long time without food and water
■ Would eat the turtles after about 6 weeks
○ 1835 sorted through specimens and started thinking about the origin of species
○ Had abstract 231 pages long by 1844
■ Friends didnt think he had enough
■ Got enough evidence
■ Showed extended version it to his friends, joseph dalton, thomas huxley,
hooker, john lubbock, and thomas wollaston in 1847 and they encouraged
him to publish it

● Alfred Russel Wallace
○ Grew up in poverty
○ Dad started as a lawyer and job hopped but failed
○ Left school at 13
○ Interested in natural history
○ Read darwin's publishings from voyage if the beagle
○ Read lyell’s principles of geology and malthus’ essay on populations
○ Formed Idea of origin of species on two different trips
■ South america(1848-1852)
● Brother died
● “On the monkeys of the amazon in 1852”
○ Different species of monkeys in north and south
○ South side not able to reach north side and vice versa
■ Malay Archipelago(1854-1862)
● Wallace’s line
○ Bali to Lombok
○ Oceanic trench in between
○ East connected by land bridges
○ West connected by land bridges
○ Discontent between east and west
○ Different kinds of species on each side of the line
○ Further west, flora and fauna started to look like south east
asia
○ Further east flora and fauna started to look like australia
■ Lyell showed “on the law which has regulated the intro of new species to
darwin”
■ Sent Darwin a manuscript, “on the tendency of varieties to depart
indefinitely more from the original type.”
○ Darwin and wallace published something at the same time
● Application
○ Don’t procrastinate
■ Sat on his publishing, should’ve published sooner
○ Find good mentors
○ Be driven
● More offspring are produced than can possibly survive
○ Leads to the “struggle for existence”
● Interindividual phenotypic variation exists
○ Makes individuals different enough that selection can act on individuals with
varying phenotypes
● Interindividual phenotypic variation is heritable
○ Genetic basis for these variations allowing them to be passed through
generations
● Interindividual phenotypic variation results in interindividual variation in either
reproductive success or survival haha haha thank you for
● Fossil Record
○ Intermediate forms representing different stages of evolutionary development
within lineages
● Homology
○ Structures that have the same evolutionary origin
■ Ex: the bone structure of a Human’s, cat’s, bat’s, et. arm
● Molecular evidence
○ genomes of species show similarities as well as signs of cumulative change
indicating nucleotide level indicating evolutionary relationship
● Sequence of DNA that codes for a functional product
○ Also code for
■ mRNA
■ tRNA
■ rRNA
○ Found on mitochondrion, chloroplast, and nucleus
● Allele
○ Different expressions of a gene
● Nucleotide
○ Nitrogenous base (A,T,G,C, and U(takes place of T in RNA), sugar, and
phosphate
● Purine
○ Shorter name, bigger structure
○ A,T
● Pyrimidines
○ Longer name, smaller structure
○ G,C
● Cells can detect if bases are not paired correctly because the distance between the two
strands that make the helix will start to get smaller.
● DNA
○ Double helix
● RNA
○ Single stranded
● Genotype
○ Actual alleles you have for a genome
● Test cross
● Quantitative Traits
○ Breeders equation
■ R=h^2(s)
● Directional selection
○ Average phenotype increases or decreases
○ In any case average phenotype will move
○ Variation goes down
■ More narrow
■ Mean shifts
● Stabilizing selection
○ Selecting against both sides equally
○ Variation decreases because your removing individuals from population in both
ends
○ Over time mean does not change, but distribution gets narrower
● Disruptive selection
○ Selecting against the average phenotype
■ Either short or tall rather than average
○ Average will stay the same
○ Variation will increasing, spreading the spectrum to the outer edges
● decrease variation slow down rate of evolution
● Pleiotropy
○ One gene controlling multiple traits
■ Bigger comb on chicken more eggs they produce
● Genes that control how many eggs are produced is the same
gene that controls how much cartilage is laid down on the chicken
● Higher bone density chickens produce better egg shells
○ Antagonistic pleiotropy
■ Traits controlled by one gene that contradict eachother
● Genetic interaction
○ Striped snakes
■ Predator cant tell where the snake begins and ends
■ If reverses itself, easier to pick out
■ Checkered
● Looks like all one color when slithering
● But difficult to see when sitting still
■ Genes interact to where they lead to different fitness outcomes
● More offspring=more fit
○ SCALED 0-1, 1 is the most fit
● Pollen carry copper resistance genes, falls on plants which cause a copper tolerance in
plants around the mine and on the downwind side
● Male guppy Color
○ Using color pattern to intimidate other males
○ Advertising to females looking to mate
■ Females are a resource to them
● Producing eggs
● Female choice
○ Choose high quality males
■ Don't want their recourse(egg) to be available to just any male
● Females choose males with long tails
○ Pass on the long tails
○ Pass on trait that encourages females to choose long tail trait
● Ultimate question
○ Asks why natural selection favors a particular trait
● Proximate explanations address mechanisms that cause a certain trait
● Cna answer simultaneously
○ Put two different colored mice in different environments observed what survived
● Plasticine mice
○ Melanocytes
■ Producing pigments deposited into hair
○ 2 genes that control melanin in hair
■ agouti
● Mutation Affects gene expression
● Atlantic coast
■ Mc1r
● In Florida,gulf coast
○ Mutilation in this gene
■ Prevents from producing dark pigment making the
mice light
● Natural selection results in adequacy, not perfection
● More colorful, the more care they get from the parent
● Variable interest- coloration
● Separate different species of birds based on their color and gather one species of adult
birds and see what species of bird they tend to most
● Mensurative- using natural selection as a basis of an experiment

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