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Genetics and Evolution
Genetics and Evolution

... frequency due to the migration of a small subgroup in a population.  Hardy-Weinberg Principle: allele frequency will remain constant (genetic equilibrium) unless one or more factors cause frequencies to change. ...
Evolution Notes II
Evolution Notes II

... • A new species will form only if populations are isolated or separated. • If this does not occur than the gene pools will blend together and the species will look the same. ...
What is Evolutionary Psychology?
What is Evolutionary Psychology?

... later culture) to solve a series of adaptive problems related to a hunter-gatherer lifestyle.  Such adaptations are not necessarily adaptive to modern humans, e.g. a preference for foods rich in calories.  However, Irons (1998) criticised the conception of the EEA as it creates a false picture of ...
Evolutionary Biology Unit Design
Evolutionary Biology Unit Design

... 1.A.1 Natural selection is a major mechanism of evolution. 1.A.2 Natural selection acts on phenotypic variations in populations. 1.A.3 Evolutionary change is also driven by genetic drift and artificial selection. 1.A.4 Biological evolution is supported by evidence from many scientific disciplines. ...
Chapter 4 - De Anza College
Chapter 4 - De Anza College

... Large Population Size (no genetic drift) No Immigration Equitable Fitness Between All Genotypes  Likely, at least one of these will not be met and allele frequencies will change.  Potential for evolutionary change in natural populations is very great. ...
biology - Ward`s Science
biology - Ward`s Science

... 7C Analyze and evaluate how natural selection produces change in populations, not individuals 7D Analyze and evaluate how the elements of natural selection, including inherited variation, the potential of a population to produce more offspring than can survive, and a finite supply of environment ...
What is the Hardy-Weinberg Theorem?
What is the Hardy-Weinberg Theorem?

... What are allele frequencies? • Because there are only two alleles in this case, the frequency of one plus the frequency of the other must equal 100%, which is to –p+q=1 • where p= A and q= a • Frequency of the diploid combinations – p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1 • p2 is AA • 2pq is Aa, and • q2 is aa ...
Evolution and Natural Selection Activity
Evolution and Natural Selection Activity

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15 - wvhs.wlwv.k12.or.us
15 - wvhs.wlwv.k12.or.us

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adaptive evolution
adaptive evolution

... all the life-forms on earth today from one or several ancestral life-forms billions of years ago ...
Name: Period: ______ Date: ______ BIOLOGY 1 TEST REVIEW
Name: Period: ______ Date: ______ BIOLOGY 1 TEST REVIEW

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UbD: LESSON PLAN Course: AP BIOLOGY Week: 08/29 MONDAY
UbD: LESSON PLAN Course: AP BIOLOGY Week: 08/29 MONDAY

... Course: AP BIOLOGY Week: 08/29 MONDAY ...
BIO102-Evolution Part 2 Ch.20
BIO102-Evolution Part 2 Ch.20

... • Some islands much drier than others • Different islands had their own, slightly different varieties of animals • Darwin hypothesized that new species could gradually appear, much like animal breeders can artificially develop new varieties through selective breeding ...
Grade 11 University Biology – Unit 3 Evolution
Grade 11 University Biology – Unit 3 Evolution

... c. Migration of individuals to a new geographic area d. Diversification of a common ancestral species into a variety of differently adapted species e. The view that, before and after a divergence, evolutionary change is slow and steady 13. The fossil record shows that dinosaurs dominated the Earth f ...
BioFundamentals - Selection and drift
BioFundamentals - Selection and drift

... The founder effect applies when a small group of individuals first colonizes a new and isolated territory, such as an island An evolutionary bottleneck occurs when some disaster or disease reduces a once large population to a small one very quickly. The original, large population is likely to have h ...
Ch 23 Ch 24 Evolution
Ch 23 Ch 24 Evolution

... The South Atlantic island of Tristan da Cunha was colonized by 15 Britons in 1814, one of them carrying an allele for retinitis pigmentosum. Among their 240 descendents living on the island today, 4 are blind by the disease and 9 others are carriers. ...
Homologous Structures
Homologous Structures

... Variations are inherited Individuals survive in their environments with varying degrees of success • Best adapted, survive and pass favorable variation on to next generation • In time, great differences arise, until a new species evolved from an old species ...
Natural Selection and Population Genetics Review
Natural Selection and Population Genetics Review

... What may be a favored adaptation in one environment may not be favored in another. ...
Lahti, David
Lahti, David

... •  Williams: The products of evolution in human behavior are usually morally evil and we should avoid them ...
10.1-Intro to Evolution
10.1-Intro to Evolution

... Suppose that Tyson had genes that he passed on to his cubs that helped his cubs to resist infections on the African plains. This means his cubs were more likely to survive to adulthood. These genes would be more common in the next generation, since more of the cubs with these genes would survive to ...
Study demonstrates evolutionary `fitness` not the most important
Study demonstrates evolutionary `fitness` not the most important

... phenotype in red, the odds of this mutation are a mere 0.15%. The odds for the slightly fitter mutation in grey are 6.7% and so this is far more likely to fix, and thus to be found and survive, even though it is much less fit than the red phenotype. ...
Evolution 2 - Groch Biology
Evolution 2 - Groch Biology

... Variation in traits Differential reproduction Heredity ...
Review
Review

... 3. What is the order of geologic time periods, from youngest to oldest? (or oldest to youngest) 4. Come up with an original memory sentence to help you remember the geologic time periods. 5. What is the sequence of rock types that is deposited in an environment with rising sea level? (transgression) ...
lecture 2
lecture 2

... Some of the Major Tenets: ...
Genetic Algorithm
Genetic Algorithm

... fitness(x) = w1 * accuracy(x) + w2 *(1 – dimensionality(x)) ...
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Evolutionary landscape

An evolutionary landscape is a metaphor; a construct used to think about and visualize the processes of evolution (e.g. natural selection and genetic drift) acting on a biological entity ( e.g., a gene, protein, population, species). This entity can be viewed as searching or moving through a search space. For example, the search space of a gene would be all possible nucleotide sequences. The search space is only part of an evolutionary landscape. The final component is the ""y-axis,"" which is usually fitness. Each value along the search space can result in a high or low fitness for the entity. If small movements through search space causes small changes in fitness are relatively small, then the landscape is considered smooth. Smooth landscapes happen when most fixed mutations have little to no effect on fitness, which is what one would expect with the neutral theory of molecular evolution. In contrast, if small movements result in large changes in fitness, then the landscape is said to be rugged. In either case, movement tends to be toward areas of higher fitness, though usually not the global optima.What exactly constitutes an ""evolutionary landscape"" is confused in the literature. The term evolutionary landscape is often used interchangeably with adaptive landscape and fitness landscape, though other authors distinguish between them. As discussed below, different authors have different definitions of adaptive and fitness landscapes. Additionally, there is large disagreement whether it should be used as a visual metaphor disconnected from the underlying math, a tool for evaluating models of evolution, or a model in and of itself used to generate hypotheses and predictions. Clearly, the field of biology, specifically evolutionary biology and population genetics, needs to come to a consensus of what an evolutionary landscape is and how it should be used.
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