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patterns of inheritance

Intraspecific variation

Within a species

Causes:

genetic- Mutation, Meiosis, Random fertilisation

Environmental- Diet, Climate, Exercise

Combination of both


Examples: blood group, Height

Interspecific variation

between different species

Basis: Each species has a different gene pool- Large genetic differences, Leads to adaptations


Examples: Broad leaves VS needlelike leaves

phenotype

Observable characteristics of an organism

genetic and environmental factors that affect phenotype

Controlled by alleles inherited from parents
e.g. Blood group, Flower colour


external influences that affect phenotype

e.g. Diet, Body mass, Light availability

continuous variation

Shows a full range of intermediate values between two extremes
Quantitative

Normal distribution (Bell shaped curve)

Controlled by many genes (Polygenic)

genes have Small additive effect

Strong influence from environment

E.g. height

discontinuous variation

Variation that falls into distinct categories with no intermediates
Qualitative

Bar chart

Controlled by a single gene (Monogenic)

No additive effect from genes

Little to know influence from the environment

E.g. blood groups

how does sexual reproduction lead to genetic variation?

Meiosis: Crossing over in prophase 1, Independent assortment in metaphase 1 + 2

Fertilisation: Random fusion of male and female gametes, Produces a diploid zygote with unique allele combinations, Offspring are genetically unique increasing variation

dominant

allele That always expresses

recessive

allele That is not expressed

Codominant

Both alleles are expressed
neither is dominant or recessive

1:2:1

heterozygous and homozygous

Hetero- alleles are different
homo- alleles are the same

monogenic inheritance (Single gene inheritance)

Involves one gene with two alleles
Can be dominant or recessive

Punnet Square

3:1 ratio

multiple alleles

some jeans have more than two alleles
E.g. ABO blood groups


Io is recessive (group O)

sex linkage

Any gene that is carried on the X or Y chromosome
Males only have one copy on the X chromosome

Recessive values on the X chromosome more likely to be expressed in males Because that is no dominant allele on the X

E.g. colour blindness

dihybrid inheritance

Inheritance of two different genes
9:3:3:1

F1 cross

Both parents are homozygous
One is homozygous dominant

One is homozygous recessive

All offspring are heterozygous

f1 generation

F2 cross

Both parents are heterozygous
All possible combinations of alleles

why is ratio 9:3:3:1

During meiosis alleles of different genes are inherited independently
Create genetic variation in gametes

autosomal linkage

Genes found on the same autosome and therefore inherited together, They don't assort independently
Will not be 9:3:3:1

The effect of crossing over in autosomal linkage

During prophase 1 of meiosis
If a crossover occurs between the linked genes, you get recombinant gametes Which usually appear in lower frequencies

epistasis

When one gene affects or masks the expression of another gene
Changes the expected ratio

Both genes are often on different loci

recessive Epistasis

The homozygous recessive masks the expression of another gene
9:3:4

dominant epistasis

The dominant allele masks the expression of another gene
12:3:1

chi squared

used to compare observed results with expected results
Measures the size of difference between observed unexpected

Helps us to determine whether the differences are significant or not

Used to test the null hypothesis

chi squared conclusion

if chisquared < critical = no significant difference, accept null
if chisquared > or equal to critical = significant difference, reject null

process of evolution by natural selection

Selection pressures
New alleles can arise by mutation

Genetic variation

Individuals best adapted to survive reproduce and pass on their beneficial alleles

types of selection

Directional- Individuals favoured in One Direction
Stabilising- Average individuals favoured

Disruptive- the 2 extreme phenotypes of favoured

stablising selection

favours the average phenotype
selects against extremes

occurs in stable environements

reduces genetic diversity

e.g. human birth weight

directional selection

favours one extreme phenotype
shifts the mean of the population in one direction

occurs whem environment changes

e.g. antibiotic resistance in bacteria

disruptive selection

extreme phenotypes are favoured
the average phenotype is selected against

produces a biomod distribution (two peaks in graph)

lead to increased genetic diversity

e.g. darwins finches

genetic drift

random changes in allele frequencies
stronger in small populations

can reduce genetic variation

genetic bottleneck

when population size is dramatically reduced e.g. natural disaster
few surviving individuals=reduced gene pool

leads to loss of rare alleles and less variation

cause different allele frequencies

founder effect

when a small group of individuals becomes isolated
new population has limited genetic variation

allele frequencies may differ from original population

hardy-weinberg principle

predicts allele and genotype frequencies will remain constant from one generation to the next, if no evolutionary forces act on the population

gene pool
allele frquency

all the alleles of all genes

the number of times an allele occurs within a gene pool

conditions for hardy weiberg principle

no mutations aeise
population is isolated

no selection

population is large

mating is random

hardy weiberg-

p^2 - homozygous dominant
2pq - heterozygous

q^2 homozygous recessive

allopatric speciation

when populations of the same species become seperated by a geological barrier, no gene pool
each population experiences different selection pressures

natural selection - advantagous alleles increase the frequency, beneficial alleles are passed on

become reproductively isolated + can no longer interbreed

sympatric speciation

speciation that occurs without geological separation
populations live in same area but become reproductively isolated due to different breedinf seasons, different courtship behaviours etc

genetic changes accumulate, populations become seperate species

artificial selection

humans choose individuals eith desirable traits to reproduce

process: identify individuals with desired characteristics, breed together, select offspring that show trait, repeat over generations


leads to increased frequency of alleles for desirable traits


e.g. high yield, disease resistance in cereals

higher milk yield in cows

advantages and disadvantages of artificial selection

improves yield, produces desirable traits

loss of genetic variation- reduced ability to adapt to environmental change, vulnerable to disease

ethical issues

unintended selection of rare disease genes

importance if maintaining genetic resources

needs to preserve wildlife + rare breeds as sources of alleles for future use
maintains a gene pool

conserved seed banks, gene banks, rare breed programmes

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