Bio Pse U9 L1
Bio Pse U9 L1
Evolution of Populations
FIGURE 1: Ruffs differ in body size as well as in the size and color of the feathers on their
heads and necks.
Image Credits: (t) ©blickwinkel/Hecker/Alamy; (bl) (br) ©Arco Images GmbH/C. Wermter/Alamy; (bc) ©Matthijs Kuijpers/Alamy
Gather Evidence
As you explore the lesson,
make a list of biotic or abiotic
factors that may have contributed
to the evolution of this population.
About 84 percent of the male ruffs are “independent.” These ruffs fight hard and
expend a lot of energy to establish a territory and attract female ruffs. They can be
easily identified, as they are the largest males and have large black and brown neck
feathers. “Satellite” males are smaller and have white neck feathers. They move freely
between independents’ territories and do not fight. Though independent males may
dominate them to attract a female, the satellites are often able to mate with the same
females. The smallest males, called “faeders,” look similar to females and generally
mate with females by sneaking, often when independents and satellites are distracted
or fighting.
Genetic Variation
Meerkats are mammals that live in the deserts of Africa. They live together in
cooperative groups.
Gather Evidence
Record the similarities and
differences you see between the
meerkats in Figure 2. Why do traits
vary between individuals in a
population?
variation may also be a result of crossing over and recombination, which occur during
meiosis. During this process, chromosomes condense and homologous chromosomes
align. Homologous chromosomes have the same genes but could have different Explain How can
alleles. During the alignment, an exchange of genetic material may take place. This mutations in gametes
exchange could alter the rearrangement of the linked genes in the chromosomes. As a become widespread in the gene
result, the gametes are not genetically identical. pool?
Gather Evidence FIGURE 3: Differences in fur color in mice are due to differences in allele combinations.
Use the image to determine Bb BB
how many total alleles, dominant BB
alleles (B), and recessive alleles (b),
are in the gene pool of this mouse
population.
bb
bb
BB
Math Connection You can use the total number of alleles, the number of dominant alleles, and the
number of recessive alleles to find the allele frequency in a population. Allele
Use Figure 3 and the allele frequency is the proportion of one allele, compared with all the alleles for that trait, in
frequency equation to answer the gene pool. To find the frequency of a particular allele, divide the number of times
the following questions: the allele is present by the total number of alleles in the population.
1. What is the allele frequency of Number of particular allele
the dominant allele B? Express Allele Frequency = ____________________
Total number of alleles
your answer as a decimal Allele frequency can also be expressed as a percentage by multiplying the frequency
rounded to the thousandths by 100. The frequencies of all the different alleles in a population should equal 1.0, or
place and as a percentage. 100 percent.
2. What is the allele frequency of Allele frequency is used to track genetic variation in populations and detect changes
the recessive allele b? Express in alleles. Imagine that periodic fires blacken the ground in the field mice habitat
your answer as a decimal in Figure 3. The black mice may be better camouflaged, providing more protection
rounded to the thousandths against predators. If they survive and reproduce more effectively than brown mice,
place and as a percentage. the frequency of the b allele may increase over time relative to the B allele frequency.
Data Analysis
In a population of 1,000 chickens, 840 hens lay blue eggs and 160 hens lay white VARIABLES
2 2
eggs. Use the equation p + 2pq + q = 1 to determine the predicted genotypic
p = frequency of O
frequencies for this population. Then compare those values with the actual
(dominant allele, blue shell)
genotypic frequencies in the population.
q = frequency of o
2
S T E P 1 Solve for q by dividing the number of oo chickens by 1,000. (recessive allele, white shell)
2 160 2
p = frequency of chickens with OO
q = = 0.16
1000 (homozygous dominant genotype)
S T E P 2 Solve for q by taking the square root of each side of the equation. 2pq = frequency of chickens Oo
(heterozygous genotype)
q = 30.16 = 0.4
2
q = frequency of chickens with oo
S T E P 3 Determine p by substituting the value of q in the equation p + q = 1: (homozygous recessive genotype)
p + 0.4 = 1
p = 1 – 0.4 = 0.6
These are the predicted allele frequencies: p = 0.6 and q = 0.4.
1. What percentage of this population is expected to be OO, Oo, and oo? What do these
values mean?
2. Through genetic analysis, scientists discovered the actual genotypic frequencies
for the above population to be OO = 0.60, Oo = 0.14, and oo = 0.26. What can you
infer by comparing these data to the values predicted above?
1. v
Cause and Effect
The peppered moth Biston betularia found in the English countryside, ranges in
color from light (Biston betularia typica) to dark (Biston betularia carbonaria). Before
the Industrial Revolution, light moths were more prevalent than dark moths. During
the Industrial Revolution, trees became covered in dark soot from coal burned in
factories. Over time, scientists observed that the number of dark moths increased
relative to light moths. More recently, clean air laws returned the trees to their
lighter coloring, and the dark colored moths decreased in frequency (Figure 6).
Recent studies found bird predation was one possible driving force behind the
population shift. When trees were covered with soot, birds preyed on light moths.
When the soot faded, birds preyed on dark moths (Figure 7). Other factors, such as
migration, may have also influenced the population and require further study.
Analyze Create a graph of the shift observed in the peppered moth population.
Place the color range on the x-axis and frequency of the trait on the y-axis.
Frequency of dark moths around Leeds, Effect of bird predation on the population of
England, from 1970-2000 light and dark moths
FIGURE 6: Frequency of Dark Moths FIGURE 7: Effect of Bird Predation
0.6 0.8
0.7
0.4
0.6
0.2
0.5
0 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
Image Credits: (t)©Perennou Nuridsany/Science Sourcew
1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Year
Year Source: Cook, L. M., B. S. Grant, and I. J. Saccheri, J. Mallet. "Selective bird predation
Source: John N. Thompson, Relentless Evolution (2013): 57, quoted in on the peppered moth: the last experiment of Michael Majerus." Biol. Lett. 2012.
http://phenomena.nationalgeographic.com/2013/10/09/ Published 8 February 2012. doi: 10.1098/rsbi.2011.1136.
evolution-in-color-from-peppered-moths-to-walking-sticks/
Explain How does the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium equation use genetic variation
and allele frequencies in a population to describe whether a population is evolving?
Selection on Populations
Though king penguins look similar, members of the population differ in some of their
physical traits. Some penguins may be larger and some smaller. Some individuals
may have long beaks, and some may have short beaks. The majority of penguins have
characteristics somewhere between these two extremes.
Normal Distribution
If penguin beak lengths and their frequencies are graphed, the result is a bell-shaped
curve, shown in Figure 8. The shape of the curve shows that the beak length of the
majority of the individuals is close to the mean length. Mean (also called average) beak
length is determined by adding the beak lengths of all the
individuals and then dividing the sum by the number of Normal Distribution
individuals. The graph also shows that there are not many FIGURE 8: Most individuals in this population have traits that
individuals with extreme traits (very short or very long beaks). fall between two extreme phenotypes.
mean
Analyze Why do few individuals have very extreme
phenotypes, such as very long or very short beaks, and
more individuals show a trait somewhere in between?
Frequency
Changing Populations
King penguins live and breed on islands around Antarctica.
FIGURE 9: King Penguins
Like other penguin species that live in cold areas, king
penguins have features that allow them to live in this type
of environment. They have layers of feathers as well as thick
layers of fat to help keep them warm. Suppose the climate in
this area warms up and continues to warm up. How might this
Image Credits: (b) ©Digital Vision/Getty Images
Stabilizing Selection
In humans, very low or very high birth weight can cause complications that affect a
baby’s health. Many infants with very low or very high birth weights do not survive
to adulthood. Over many generations, these two phenotypes were selected against.
More average birth weights, which had fewer weight-related
Stabilizing Selection Explore Online complications, were selected for. Today, the frequency of
individuals with an average birth weight is higher than those
FIGURE 10: In stabilizing selection, intermediate phenotypes with extremely low or extremely high birth weights.
are selected over phenotypes at both extremes.
This type of selection is called stabilizing selection. This is the
mean type of natural selection in which intermediate phenotypes
are selected over phenotypes at both extremes. In the
example of birth weight in humans, individuals with average
birth weights were more successful than those with very low
or very high birth weights.
Frequency
Directional Selection
Another type of selection can be seen in the case of the peppered moth. Recall that
before the Industrial Revolution, there were more sightings of light-colored (typica)
moths and few sightings of dark-colored (carbonaria) moths. As factories were built
during the Industrial Revolution, pollution increased. At this time, scientists observed
that the number of typica moths decreased, while the number of the carbonaria moths
increased and became more abundant in the population than the typica variety.
Model In your Evidence Notebook, draw a normal distribution graph for peppered
moth coloration before the Industrial Revolution. Then, show how the frequencies of
the phenotypes changed during the Industrial Revolution.
The type of selection observed in peppered moths is called directional selection. This
is the type of natural selection in which one extreme phenotype is selected over the
other extreme phenotype, shifting the mean toward one of the extremes. In the case
of the peppered moths, the dark phenotype was selected over the light phenotype
during the Industrial Revolution.
Range of variable
Disruptive Selection
Lazuli buntings are birds found in the western part of the United States. The male birds Analyze In your Evidence
have feathers with colors that range from brown to bright blue. The dominant adult Notebook, compare and
males have the brightest blue feathers. They are the most successful in winning mates contrast stabilizing, directional, and
and have the best territories. For young buntings, the brightest blue and the dullest disruptive selection.
brown males are more likely to win mates than males with bluish-brown feathers.
Research suggests that dominant adult males are aggressive toward young buntings
they see as threats, including bright blue and bluish-brown males. The dullest brown
birds can therefore win a mate because the adult males leave Explore Online
them alone. Meanwhile, the bright blue birds attract mates Disruptive Selection
simply because of their color. FIGURE 12: In disruptive selection, the extreme phenotypes
are selected over the intermediate phenotypes.
The type of selection observed in male lazuli bunting birds is
called disruptive selection. This is the type of natural selection mean
in which both extreme phenotypes (brown and bright blue
feathers) are favored, while individuals with the intermediate
phenotype (in between brown and blue) are selected against.
Frequency
Explain Using evidence from this lesson, explain why populations, and not individuals,
evolve.
Predict Explain how the Roses can grow in the wild or be cultivated. A bee may transport pollen from a farm
difference in gene flow that cultivates roses of different colors to a nearby area where wild red roses grow. The
between populations could cause pollen can fertilize a wild rose flower, introducing new genetic material into the wild
them to evolve in different or population. This is an example of gene flow, which is the movement of alleles from one
similar ways. population to another. Gene flow can cause a population to evolve.
Genetic Drift
Small populations are more likely to be affected by chance than large populations.
Let’s look at how a chance event can affect the alleles that code for a lizard’s tail shape.
Hands-On Activity
Use a deck of cards to represent the lizard population. The four suits represent four
different alleles for tail shape. The allele frequencies of the original population are
25% spade, 25% heart, 25% club, and 25% diamond tail shapes.
Predict How can random chance affect the allele frequencies in a population?
MATERIALS PROCEDURE
• deck of cards 1. Shuffle the cards. Holding the deck face down, turn over 40 cards. These
cards represent the alleles of 20 offspring produced by random mating of the
individuals in the initial population.
2. Separate the 40 cards by suit and then find the allele frequencies for the
offspring by calculating the percentage of each suit. Record these values in
your Evidence Notebook.
3. Suppose a storm isolates a few lizards on another island where they start a
new population. Reshuffle the deck and draw 10 cards to represent the alleles
of five offspring produced in this smaller isolated population.
4. Repeat Step 2 to calculate the resulting allele frequencies. Record the results in
your Evidence Notebook.
ANALYZE
Answer the following questions in your Evidence Notebook:
1. Compare the original allele frequencies to those calculated in Steps 2 and 4.
How did they change?
2. Does this activity demonstrate evolution? Why or why not? Does it
demonstrate natural selection? Why or why not?
Bottleneck Effect
In the late 1800s, northern elephant seals were severely overhunted for their blubber,
which was used in lamp oil. It is estimated that by 1890, there were fewer than 100
individuals left. After hunting ended, the population rebounded, and now there are
more than 100,000 individuals.
FIGURE 13: The hunting of northern elephant seals greatly depleted the species’
numbers and genetic diversity. Analyze Use the model
in Figure 13 to explain the
initial
change in genetic variation
population between the initial elephant seal
population and the population after
it rebounded.
population
in 1890s
current
population
The northern elephant seal suffered from the bottleneck effect. This is genetic drift
resulting from an event that drastically reduces the size of a population. Through
genetic drift, some alleles can be completely lost from the gene pool and others can be
Image Credits: (l) ©National Geographic Magazines/Marc Moritsch/Getty Images
Founder Effect
The Old Order Amish communities were founded in North America by small numbers
of migrants from Europe. The gene pools of these smaller populations are very
different from those of the larger populations. For example, the Amish of Lancaster
County, Pennsylvania have a high rate of Ellis-van Creveld syndrome. Although this
form of dwarfism is rare in other human populations, it has become common in this
Amish population through genetic drift. Geneticists have traced this syndrome back to
one of the community’s founding couples.
founding population B
The founder effect is genetic drift that occurs when a small number of individuals
become isolated from the original population and colonize a new area. Figure 14
demonstrates genetic drift due to the founder effect in a beetle population. The
founding populations each represent a distinct gene pool observed in the founding
population. As a result, allele frequencies within the founding populations change
from the original population reducing genetic variation.
Sexual Selection
Male peacocks have elaborate tails made of long, colorful feathers. These tail feathers
not only make male peacocks easy targets for predators, they also make flying away
from predators harder. Female peacocks, though, are a muted, brown color and do
not possess long tail feathers like the males. These flashy colors and ornamental traits
FIGURE 15: The winner of a fight
seem to be in contrast with what should have evolved from natural selection, so how
increases his chances of mating did they evolve? Image Credits: (b) ©Corbis/W. Perry Conway/Getty Images
with a female. In general, mating is less costly to a male than a female. Males produce many sperm,
so they can invest in mating without much cost. Females, on the other hand, produce
a limited number of offspring. They tend to select males that will give their offspring
the best chance of survival. This difference in reproductive costs can make females
choosier than males about mates. Sexual selection occurs when certain traits increase
reproductive success.
Prior to the mating season, male animals like deer, elk, and moose fight other males.
The winner in this competition establishes his dominance over other males and his
fitness to mate with the females in the population. This type of competition among
male members for the right to mate is known as intrasexual selection.
A population is stable and in genetic equilibrium when its genetic makeup does
not change over time. Because the conditions that lead to this genetic stability
are rare in the natural world, evolution occurs.
There are five mechanisms that can lead to evolution:
• Mutation can lead to the formation of new alleles. Mutations produce
genetic variation.
• Natural selection affects populations, acting on traits that increase an
individual’s ability to survive and reproduce.
• Sexual selection selects for traits that give members of a population a
competitive advantage in mating and reproducing.
Image Credits: ©National Geographic Magazines/Tim Laman/Getty Images
Explain Why is genetic drift more likely in small populations than in large populations?
Consider the male ruffs from the beginning of this lesson. How could genetic drift or
sexual selection explain the different types of males in the population? Use evidence from
the lesson to support your claims.
Data Analysis
Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria
Antibiotics are medicines used to
N. gonorrhoeae Resistance, United States, 1987-2011
kill disease-causing bacteria. Studies
have shown that certain species of FIGURE 17: N. gonorrhoeae shows some level of resistance to many types of antibiotics.
disease-causing bacteria evolved to be 30 Tetracycline
resistant to antibiotics. The Centers for resistance
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) 25 Penicillin
found that doctors were prescribing resistance
antibiotics when they weren’t necessary. 20 Fluoroquinolone
Additionally, patients were not taking resistance
Percent
Lesson Self-Check
FIGURE 18: There are three types of male ruffs, and all can occur in a single population.
Recall that there are three types of males in the ruff population. The dominant
“independent” males are territorial and fight other independent males to attract
females. The smaller “satellite” males do not fight. Satellites freely move between
independents’ territories and are able to mate with some females. The “faeder” males
look like female ruffs. They generally mate with females sneakily while the other males
are distracted or fighting.
Explain Refer to the notes in your Evidence Notebook to explain how three very
different types of males evolved in a single population.
Scientists think that the independent males expend a lot of energy and incur the
Image Credits: (l) (r) ©Arco Images GmbH/C. Wermter/Alamy; (c) ©Matthijs Kuijpers/Alamy
risk of being injured in a fight when establishing a territory to attract females. The
independents (84 percent of the population) attract females by showing dominance.
Types that pay fewer of these costs also have evolved within the population. The
satellites (14 percent of the population) mate with the females in the independent
males’ territories. Though independent ruffs may mate with more females, they are at
risk of being injured in territorial fights and are more susceptible to predators because
of their elaborate plumage and larger size. The faeders (1 percent of the population)
are able to reproduce by sneaking into an independent male’s territory and quickly
mating with a female.
Interestingly, scientists have discovered that the behavior and physical traits that
differentiate the three types are controlled at a single genetic location, a “supergene.”
Studies indicate that the faeders are a result of a chromosome inversion that occurred
3.8 million years ago. The satellite type was a result of a chromosomal rearrangement
between the original sequence and the inverted sequence that happened about 0.5
million years ago. The differences in traits and behavior among these types allow them
all to be successful and persist in the population.
CHECKPOINTS
Check Your Understanding 7. Widowbirds are members of a bird species found in the
southeastern part of Africa. The females have dull brown
feathers and the males have black feathers, including tail
Use the following information to answer Questions 1-4.
feathers that measure an average of 41 centimeters long.
Studies have shown that females prefer and choose to
In a population of 900 pea plants, 530 are homozygous
mate with males that have longer tails. Which outcome
purple, 250 are heterozygous purple, and 120 are
can be expected to occur in this scenario?
homozygous white. Purple color (P) is dominant and white
color (p) is recessive. a. Over time, there will be more males with 41 centimeters
tails.
1. Determine the genotypic frequency in the population for b. Over time, there will be more males with tails longer
PP, Pp, and pp individuals. than 41 centimeters.
c. Over time, there will be more males with tails shorter
2. What is the total number of alleles in this gene pool? than 41 centimeters.
d. Over time, there will be more males with no tails.
3. What is the allele frequency of P? Express the frequency
as a decimal rounded to the nearest hundredth. 8. Model how the bottleneck effect can lead to evolution
by putting the following events in order.
4. What is the allele frequency of p? Express the frequency a. Many of the individuals die in the population.
as a decimal rounded to the nearest hundredth.
b. Population increases with less variation.
c. A random event acts on a population.
Use the information in the table below to answer Question 5. d. Surviving individuals reproduce.
Frequency in Original Frequency in New
Color Variation 9. Determine if the scenarios will likely result in an increase
Population (%) Population (%)
or a decrease in genetic variation over time. Copy and
Gray 15 45 then complete the table below in your notebook by
Gray and white 60 20 writing “increase” or “decrease” in the second column.