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bio 221 1-5 pt 1

selection vs evolution

Selection occurs within a population but evolution requires generations.

what do fossils show

show evolution over long time frames

cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower being descendant of wild mustard is an example of

artifical selection

can evolution happen on small time scales

yes

what are darwins 4 postulates

1. variation is pre existing and can be passed on to offspring
2. selection is based on environment

3. not all offspring survive (those who survive is non random)

4. differential reproduction (those with advantageous traits in that space and time are more likely to survive and reproduce)

what was darwins weakness

didn't propose a theory for inheritance, the concept of mutation was not developed until 1900's

what type of evolution did lamarck believe in?

transformational evolution

what type of evolution did darwin believe in?

variational evolution

what is the most powerful direct evidence of evolutionary change

fossils

what does fossilization need

an environment where they can fossilize

who first started study fossils

george cuvier first started studying fossils and first proposed extinctions

what is wrong with the fossil record

it is incomplete, we've only found the easiest to find fossils, hot humid areas rarely have fossils. fossils are also biased because hard and bony parts/ aquatic organisms fossilize better.

why is dating fossils hard

due to changing sediment conditons, if the environment that the fossil was in changes it can obscure the date

how old is the universe? how about the earth?

universe- 13.77 byo and earth- 4.5 byo

how do we know how old the earth is

because of 4.4 byo meteorite in australia and zircon crystals that are also this old, darwin also hypothesized this because of geological formations in england

how does a fully radioactive element decay

at a measurable rate

when were all radioactive isotopes formed

at dawn of solar system

what does the complete absence of shorter lived parent isotopes tell us

that our solar system is ancient

how old is life on earth?

approx 3.8byo, esitmated by principle of superpostion

list these key events from oldest to most recent, fossils of oldest known chordates (incl vertebrates), oldest land vertebrates, dinosaurs, oldest land plant fossils, our common mammalian ancestors, birds, the oldest trackways

520 Mya: fossils of oldest known chordates (incl vertebrates)
480 Mya: the oldest trackways

475 Mya: oldest land plant fossils

360 Mya: oldest land vertebrates

230 Mya: dinosaurs

180 Mya: Our common mammalian ancestor

150 Mya: birds

is there any fossils from the origin of life period

no just zircons and stromatolites

what are the two main hypotheses of the origin of life

deep sea vents and hot springs

what is the deep sea vent hypothesis

that there was tons of energy, carbon and lots of redox worthy chemicals

what is the hot spring hypothesis

that there was tons of energy and nutrients, lots of oxidized minerals

what is the miller-urey experiment

where they tried to recreate the conditons of early earth but failed

what can we hypothesize about the atmosphere and conditions of early earth through rocks?

very little oxygen, lots off ammonia, lots of methane, lots of volcanic activity. These conditions together could cause abiotic synthesis of organic molecules

what is the presumed origion of eukaryotes

1.8bya because of acritarchs

how old were mutlicellular fossils presumed to be

used to think 1.6 byo, interpreted as filamentous algae

635 myo were the oldest fossils intepreted as animals.. what are they?

sponges

what is lifes earliest animals

known as the ediacaran fauna

what did the cambrian, " the innovation era" give rise to

segmentation, 3 axis's, more complexity. (ex. trilobite, mollsucs, and first chordates)

what is the first hypothesis of why the cambiran was the innovation era

Increased O2, allowed more primary productivity, allows emergence of predators, allows inc in body size BUT oxygen levels didn’t necessarily change around Cambrian and larger animals already existed

what is the second hypothesis of why the cambrian was the innovation era?

Evolutionary innovation, evolution of novel traits (ex. Segmentation) allowed increased adaptability (ex. Hox gene cluster evolution may have sparked Cambrian)

what is the third hypothesis of why the cambrian was the innovation era?

Predation and arms race, if predation arose during Cambrian it could explain, inc body size, hard body size, motility/ swimming ability

when did land plants arise? what plants?

the late Ordovician and early Silurian period (450 Mya). Most likely liverwort like organisms, possibly co invaded by fungi, vascular plants evolved after

what is the oldest known land animal fossils ~ 428 mya

millipede

what are amniotes~ 314 mya

amniotes produce shelled eggs

what was the event when the meteor hit earth 66 Mya (end of cretaceous) and caused a massive shift on earth? what happened to organism popualtions

this was the paleogene mass extinction event which caused the loss of big reptiles but the little mammals thrived (prob due to loss of predators)

what did darwin think about assoicating the most recent common ancestor of species.

Darwin thought, more shared features= more recent common ancestor

what are infromative characters/traits in a phylogeny

vary with the taxa of interest, have different states, can be morphological, behavioural, biochemical, genetic.

why do we need to use taxonomy and phylogenetics?

to reconstruct evolutionary relationships so that trees can reflect shared ancestry

order the 9 domains

life, domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species

what did mendel determine about hwo traits of offspring were determined

mendel determined that traits of offsprings were determined by parental factors that remained discrete.

what are discrete traits

traits that have no blending

what did mendel use to study traits

hand pollinated pea plants with known traits, he was the first to use math to explain predicted traits in offspring

explain the results of mendels pea experiment

Crossed round and wrinkled peas, all progeny were round (F1)- all showed only one parental phenotype, no blend, these were heterozygote (het) and showed the dominant traits. Then he crossed Rr and Rr and got progeny that were 3 R: 1 W (approximately).

what did mendel find about the nature of how traits come

that traits came in pairs and the genes are halved in germ cells

what are mendels 3 laws

law of dominance, law of segregation, law of independent assortment

what are non mendelian traits

most traits dont follow the phenotypic ratios of mendelian inheritance because of multiple alleles of one gene, influence on other genes and influence of environment

how is variation created in a population of diploid organisms

a diploid (2n) will only carry 2 alleles in an individual but multiple alleles can exist in population which can create variation in a population without necessarily being influenced by other genes or the environment

what are two exmplaes of mutliple alleles

ex. pavilion dardanus butterlfies which have multiple alleles which give rise to multiple wing patterns within the same speices

ex. human ABO blood type has 3 alleles, 9 possible genotype within pop, 4 possible phenotypes

are most traits continous or discrete

most traits are continous

what is a continous trait

where their phenotypic variation exists on spectrum

what causes continous traits

polygenic inheritance, where many genes contribute to the same traits

how much of an impact can the environment have on phenotype

environmental conditions can have a great impact on phenotype, even greater than genotype sometimes.

what are examples of enviornmental condtions that can impact phenotype

These conditions can include, temp, availability of nutrients, presence of toxins/mutagen, some can be the maternal effect

how do you know if a phenotype has a genetic origin or is purely environmental

Easiest way is to force mate individuals with opposite phenotypes if the progeny will follow a Mendelian inheritance pattern in the F2 but most traits aren’t Mendelian.

what is the broad structure of eukaryotic DNA

it is arranged into chromosomes, multiple linear chrosomes. DNA in eurkaryotes is organzied using histone proteins. The DNA wraps around a histone octomer creating a nucleosome.

what is the advantages of how DNA is organized

The organization of DNA protects it from damage, organizes the nucleus and limits access of transcriptional machinery to DNA

where are chromsomes stored, how does it sizes work

chromsomes are stored in the eukaryotic nucleus (membrane bound organelle), chromosome sizes can vary greatly- msot eukaryotes are diploid (2n)

how do soma and germ cells differ.

in the soma of humans cells are diploid but germ cerlls are haploid

what is the general steps of central dogma

DNA to RNA (transcription), RNA to protein (translation). Only one strand of DNA is used as a template.

what carries out translation.

Translation is carried out by ribosome and uses a universal codon table. 3 nucleotides= 1 amino acid

what allows for mutuational tolerance

Redundancy in the genetic code allows mutational tolerance (more than one codon encoding same amino acid. Most of redundancy is @ 3rd codon.)

what gives rise to different cells in eukarytoes

In most euk, each cell contains the exact same entire genome. Only a fraction of genes are expressed giving rise to different cell types.

when does most gene regulation occur

Most gene regulation occurs at the level of transcription initiation. This is regulated by a region of the DNA called the promoter.

what is another common area of gene regulation

alternative splicing

is most of the eukaryotic genome expressed

Most of eukaryotic genome is not expressed and most doesn’t become protein

pseudo genes are

genes that have mutated such that they no longer contain a promoter, hence not being transcribed to mrna

what are genetic markers

markers are specific sequences of DNA, often located throughout the genome, can be used as refrerence points to track the inheritance of genes linked to certain traits. the goal is to find genetic markers significantly associated with the extremes of the trait

what are transposable elements

jumping genes, products of ancient viral infection. Can change positions within the DNA, can cause mutations by disrupting the genes or regulatory regions that they jump to.

a bigger genome is a more complex genome? example?

no gemone size is unrelated to complexity, genome size caries greatly between organisms. ex. sea anemones have more genes than humans.

where do most complex organisms get variation from

from alternative splicing not from gene #

what is alternative splicing

process by which a single gene can produce multiple different versions of protein, occurs during RNA processing. alternative splicing allows for the exons (coding regions) to be arrange in different combinations leading to the production of multiple proteins from the same gene.

what does evolution rely on to drive variation and selection

meiosis

what are the products of meiosis

4 genetically different haploid gametes

through what mechanisms does meiosis generate genetic variation

crossing over, independent assortment, random fertilization

pair of chromosomes have the same blank but potentially different blank

pair of chromsomes have same gene order but potentially different alleles

what is the point of meiosis

it generate genetic variation and haploid gametes.

how does meoisis cause gentic variation

due to the crossing over in prophase I (homo chromo exchange genetic material)
and

independent assortment in metaphase I (homo chromo pairs line up, arrange randomly)

and

random fertilization (random sperm and random egg)

is a mutation always harmful

only the environment determines if a mutation is harmful (most common), neutral, beneficial (rare).

how do asexual organisms get varation

they rely on very rare benefical mutations for variation

what are the 4 types of point mutations

silent muation, missense mutation, nonsense mutation, frameshift mutation

what is a point mutation

change in a single base pair of DNA sometimes due to DNA replication error or exposure to mutagens

what is a silent mutation?

change in DNA seq that doesnt change protein seq

ex. GAA changed to GAG but both of these code for the same amino acid

what is a missense mutation?

a change in a single base pair that results in a codon coding for a different amino acid which can affect protein function

ex. GAG mutated to GTG code for a different amino acid which can affect the protein.

what is a nonsense mutation

point mutation that changes codon to a stop codon, causing protein to be prematurely shortened. Can cause to loos of function or non fuctional proteins.

ex. CAA muated to UAA (stop codon), causes translation to stop early.

frameshift mutation

deletetion/insertion of nucleotide so that the reading frame shifts of the genetic sequence.this leads to a complelety different protein sequence after the point of mutation which can be devastating to protein function

which point mutations effect the protein

missense maybe, nonsense, frameshift

are point mutations rare

no they are common, but the rarer events have greater effects

are aneploid rare

yes, gain/loss of chromosome

what is gene dosage

gain or loss of chromosomes, often have great effects

is the odd of any one base pair mutating low

yes

what is the average number of point mutations that occur in the genome of an indiviudal from one gen to the next.

around 61

what does HW eqbrm allows us to predict

HW allows us to predict the particular phenotypes in offspring for an entire pop

what does HW eqbrm provide

HW eqbrm provides a null hypothesis for testing evidence of evolutionary change.

how could the ratio of genotypes and phenotypes be the same in every generation

if there was no selection/mutation/drift

is H-W eqbrm satisifed in reality

no, to be satisifed a population must be infinitely large, have no net muation, no net migration, mate randomly, and have no selection (no disadvantageous/advantageous traits)

if H-W satisifed how would the pop look

alleles and genotype freq in offspring would be the same as parent gen

what is HW eqbrm equation. p=? q=?

P^2 + 2pq + q^2= 1

p= dominant allele

q= recessive allele

in a pop of chickens there is a locus that determine feather colour. there are two alleles of that gene (A1 and A2). you have a pop where 25% are homozygotes for A1 and 25% are homo for A2. what will be the genotypic frequencies in the offspring if the pop is at HW eqbrm.

a1/a1=0.25, a2/a2=0.25, a1/a2=0.50

of 1000 indiv, 400 are A1/A1, 400 are A1/A2, and 200 are A2/A2... what are the freq of p and q in this generation?
use equation f(p)= (f(A1A1)x2)+f(A1A2)/2x (pop size) - 2 for diploid, and multiple homo by 2 because they have 2 copies. solve for q as well.

p=0.6 and q=0.4. P+Q=1

what are genotypic frequences

refer to the proportions of different genotypes (homozygous domiannt, heterozygous, homo recessive) in a pop.

how do genotypic freq change vs allele freq

genotypic frequency can shift due to non random mating or genetic drift. allele freq shift from mirgation/mutations

does allele frequency change with geneotypic frequency

no

humans have blood type locus called MN that exhibitys a codomonant phenotype (in a hetero they are both M and N phenotype). A population found that 187 indiv were MM, 114 were MN and 19 were NN (of 320 people). what are the frequencies of p and q. what are the expected genotypic freq.

p= 0.7625
q=0.2375


p^2= 0.581 (MM)

2pq= 0.362(MN)

q^2= 0.0564 (NN)

what are the expected counts in a popualtion of 320 people? do they match up with the expected counts?

MM 0.58 of 320= 185
MN 0.36 of 320= 115

NN 0.05 of 320= 16


roughly match

genetic dynamic within a pop depends on

the connection between the pop

anything that violates H-W eqbrm can lead to

evolution- mutation, natural selection, migration,drift

is evolution always selective/directional

no, sometimes random events like drift and mutation happen

drift is often considered a sampling error why?

because it is random and no selected for.

how can we measure drift

computer simulation or with a drosphila lab experiment

what is the impact of drift dependent on?

impact of drift is dependent on pop size. The larger the population the more genetic stability. The smallest populations have the biggest fluctuations and fixation is least likely

what happened during drosphila lab experiment

researcher mates 8 females to 8 males each gen, 107 lab pop of D.melanogaster each found with 16 bw/bw^75 heterozygotes. Found: over 19 gens, bw^75 allele is lost, bw allele is fixed after 30 gen.

what does it mean for an allele to be fixed

when every indiv in the pop has the same allele at a particular gene location, no genetic variation for that particular gene in the pop- only one allele exists and it is the only form of that gene being passed on

does genotype freq change with allel freq change

yes, any small shifts in allele freq plugged into HW would turn into big shifts in genotype freq.

what is the problem with drift, esp in small popualtions

big problem for conservation because don't necessarily want the 2 extremes and drift makes the wild extreme more common. At a point of a species being endangered the odds of an allele being fixed increases

what are two special types of drift

bottleneck and founder effect.

what is the likelihood of an allele being lsot during a bottle neck related to

related to how common it is in the original population. Rarer alleles simply less likely to make through bottleneck, more likely to be lost. Ex: northern elephant seal. Was nearly hunted to extinction (20 indiv left), population expansion after a constriction lead to the bottleneck effect now observable in the genetic diversity of the extant population

what is founder effect

small group of indiv from a larger pop start a new pop, the founders are the only subset of genetic diveristy present. As a result, new pop may have different allele freq than original pop and certain alleles may be over or underrepresented

ex. the mutiny of the bounty

what is the interbreeding coeffcient? (F)

the calculated egree to which an indiv is inbred. F= proportion of individuals in a population who are autozygous.

what does autozygous mean

allele that is inherited identically by descent from both parent, allele comes from common ancestor. both copies of allele are identical

what does allozygoous mean? how is it calcualted

two copies of a gene in an indivual are not identical by descent, no common ancestor. 1-F= fraction that are allozygous

what is the proportion of heterozygotes in a population expected to be when there is no inbreeding. 2pq(1-F). what if there is inbreeding

if no in breeding, F=0, het= 2pq= HW
If there is inbreeding, F>0, F<1, the proportion of 2pq= less than H-W predictions.

you observed in one pop, gold that the heterozygote freq is 0.48. are they inbred? p=0.4, q=0.6. purpel heterozygot freq=0.24.

if 2pq= H0= null hypothesis for expected # of hets

H0= He (expected het)

H= H0-H0F (observed het freq)

F= H0-H/ H0 or F= 2pq- observed freq of het/ 2pq

'

what about population purple

F=0 not in bred for gold F=0.5 inbred for purple

what is the problem with inbreeding

inbreeding does not change allele freq but increases homozygosity

why is increased homozygosity bad

allows recessive, deleterious alleles to persists and reduce viability. Their effect only obvious when homozygous.

what is an example of disadvantageous inbreeding

the hapsburgs family where 50% hapsburgs children died before during 1 where as the rest of spanish pop ~ 80% survived

how do landscape genetic affect gene flow

when populations are separated by geographical barriers, because members of pop tend to be sedentary then gene flow is low, then pop will genetically differentiate over time due to drift.

how do lynx and bighorn sheeps exemplify connectedness

lynx have greater home ranges so over the same distances show greater connectdetness than big horn sheep

why is it that the farther the geographical distance between pops the greater the genetic difference?

usually, this is bc that means there is been a greater amount of time that has passed since the two pops have interacted. These distances can also be used as pop fingerprints. To determine where an indiv came from

more gene flow means what for variation and drift

Landscape features (including man made) can influence home ranges and gene flow.
More gene flow means increased variation means less drift.

F1

first filial generation

gene flow

movement of alleles between different pops through migration or interbreeding of indiv. increase genetic diversity within a pop by introducing new alles from another pop, it can reduce genetic differences between populations, and it can prevent speciation (formation of new species) by maintain connectivity.

landscape genetics

knowledge of geography allows researchers to explore how genotypes vary across landscapes.

bottle neck

(type of drift) when a population undergoes a rapid constriction in population size, then expands = the allele freq in surviving population may not reflect the freq in original population

founder effect

(type of drift), occurs when an offshoot of a bigger population establishes a new population, therefore the new population will be dependent on alleles the founders carry. Typically the alleles that are most common will be most represented (but there is randomness)

inbreeding depression

inbreeding increases homozygosity and brings recessive (and sometimes deleterious) alleles to surface. Declines in survival and fecundity are due to inbreeding humans.

inbreeding

mating with close relatives, violates HW assumption of random mating. Selfing is the most extreme form, and shows how inbreeding reduces the proportion of heterozygotes in a population.

sib-mating

suppose we could magically label individual alleles and follow them through subsequent generations. Ex. Label one copy of A1 in a male with an asterisk (*). Potential for diversity is reduced. after 1 gen A1* may have been passed to both son and daughter, if siblings mate= 25% chance that offspring will have both alleles from grandfather

no subdivision

individuals can interact with one another very easily (pigeons)

intermediate subdivison

there are little pockets of individuals that can move between subdivision but its not contiguous (snowshoe hares in edm)

genetic drift

happens when the H-W assumption of an infinite population is violated. Random changes in the frequency of two or more alleles/haplotypes/genotypes therefore we have to consider drift as a force that can cause allelic change (evolution) that are not due to selection.

extreme subdivsion

populations that are completely isolated from one another

population

group of interacting (potential) and potentially interbreeding individuals of a particular species

population genetics

the study of allele distributions within and among populations and how they change over time

Evolution

different forms arise from changes in allele frequency. it is specifically defined as a change in inherited traits in a population over time, Darwin described it as descent with modification. Evolution is not synonymous with natural selection, natural selection is a mechanism of evolution but not the only mechanism and it may result in evolution if selection causes a change in allele frequencies (genetic structure of pop) over time.

4 mechanisms of evolution

muation, drift, natural select, gene flow.
new: aritifcal selection

mutation as a mechanism of evolution

mechanism that drives heritable variation (not all mutations do this)

drift as a mechanism of evolution

random changes to the genetic makeup of a population (mutation is a mechanism of drift, there are several others too)

natural selection as a mechanism of evolution

caused by the interaction of genotype with the environment.

gene flow as a mechanism of evolution

migration between populations

artifical selection as a mechanism of evoltuion (new)

now an important driver of evolution (goes hand in hand with natural selection, new)

rate of evolution depends on 3 things

Rate of reproduction
Selective forces

Environmental change

who is georges cuvier

anatomist, found life forms that went extinct. Thought extinction was only caused by catastrophe

who is jean baptise lamarck

zoologist, curated fossils and extant mollusks. Saw gradual change in individuals. Suggested species change over time based on the use and disuse theories. Also that change comes from interactions with the environment that can be passed onto offspring.

what did lamarck get wrong

He got a few things wrong ( that microbes arise from spontaneous generation, that humans were the most complex species therefore they have been around the longest and the inheritance of acquired traits which is partially wrong because it has some applications.)

who is charles lyell

geologist, found that landforms are not fixed but slowly changing because of geological processes, estimated earth was older than biblical 6000 years. Also proposed extinction.

who is thomas malthus

talked about survival of the fittest in a human population. Human pop increases faster than food supply (demand outpaces supply). Completion leads to survival of the fittest because resources are always limited .

who is alfred russel wallace

Naturalist, came up with natural selection independent of Darwin. Encouraged Darwin to publish.

who is charles darwin

Collected specimens and fossils found patterns of distribution of traits (particularly distribution of beak lengths in finches between Galápagos Islands). Wrote “ the origin of the species by natural selection). Descent with modification but he did not understand how modification or inheritance occurred.

what is galapagos

far from mainland South America, relatively young islands, little gene flow isolated pop were a result of bottle neck.

what is the 3 principles of descent with modification. explain them

Variation- exists in all species
Artificial selection- enhancement of desired traits

Distribution of species in time and space- if there is descent with modifications, then similar species with modifications should be found in similar areas.

Lamarckism

Transformational evolution, forms change in their lifetime and that is passed on . Everything changes and change is heritable

Darwinism

Variational evolution, only a few survive and persist

fossils

trace of past life that has fossilized through a slow process of mineralization, rare but numerous, many organisms don’t fossilize because it required perfect conditions of desiccation (dehydration) and mineralization. Soft tissues rarely fossilize.

fossilized structures that readily fossilzie

bones/ teeth- readily fossilize

trace fossils

indirect evidence of life, not of the organism but from the organism (ex. Subfossil: fossilized footprints, a coprolite (poop). Important for determining the physiological method of the organism.

chemical fossils

organisms engage in chemical reactions that leave a mark in geological time (ex. Fossils fuels represent carbonaceous deposits of fossilized marine algae)

zircon

crystals the preserve specks of carbon used for dating

radiometric dating

based on the principle of radioactive decay, these radioactive isotopes decay at a steady state (denoted by their half life)

Half life

amount of time for half of the atoms in a unit of element to decay to daughter products

eon

largest unit of time (can be thousands or millions of years long), delineated by major changes to earth's system

Hadeon Eon (hellish eon- 4.55 to 3.8 bya ):

no evidence of life, very volatile, inhospitable, no liquid water

Archaeon Eon (3.8-2.5 bya

earliest forms of unicellular life, life was limited to the oceans ( which contained oxygen, nutrients and energy) as with only trace oxygen in the atmosphere. Bacteria first then Archaea. stromatolites.

principle of superposition:

dating the rock layering to date fossilized chemical life forms in that layer (estimate). Uses radiometric dating (ex. Uranium for old things and carbon for young things (<50k years).

C14

allows us to date tissue itself, can be naturally replenished in atmosphere (< 50k years)

stromatolites

layered structures formed by chemical reactions of ancient bacteria (oldest fossils). Ex. In Ontario there are iron banded formations - chemical signatures of ancient life, only from biotic processes.

Proterozoic Eon (2.5 bya- 500 mya)

beginnings of eukaryotic and multicellular life. Great oxygenation Event (2.5 bya- 2.2 bya), oxygen content in the atmosphere increased significantly due to the rise of photosynthetic bacteria. Oxygen is a strong selective pressure because it is so reactive, this along with other pressures probably led to the evolution of eukaryotes.

Phanerozoic Eon (500 Mya- present)

the Cambrian explosion marked the evolution of the modern day animal body plan, this eon and forwards is depicted in greater detail, more visible life.

3 eras

Paleozoic (old life), Mesozoic (middle life), Cenozoic (new life)

4 chemical biomarkers of ancient prokaryotic life:

LUCA: last universal common ancestor
Prokaryotes: no membrane bound nucleus (bacteria and archaea)

Eukaryotes: archaea evolved internal membranes

Archaea: “extremophile”, prokaryotic, ancient archaeon that evolved in eukaryote.

acritarchs

single celled organisms of ambiguous origin. Large, structurally complex biological specimens. How we presumed origin of eukaryotes .

animals biomarker

has this biomarker (chemical signature)- cholesterol like molecules

ediacaran fauna

mostly fossilized sponges, jellyfish and comb jellies, front like organisms. Small animals with simple morphology. Almost completely wiped out by a mass extinction.

The cambrian

most extensive period of adaptive radiation and formation of new life forms, around 541 Mya the entire ocean ecosystem was reorganized and new animal body plans emerged, Cambrian animals had modern body plans (invention of segmentation and 3 axis (r/l, d/v, a/p), notochord, more complex). Most major extant animal phyla make their first appearance in deposits (550 Mya) . Appearance of hard body parts, and huge variety of form, feeding methods and locomotion. Best known deposit is the Burgess Shale.

end of Devonian

vascular plants evolved. Earth was covered in ferns, horsetails and first seed plants . Land plants got more sun but they need to stand up and were susceptible to dehydration

amniotes

produced shelled eggs. 3 forms - diapsids (2 holes behind eye sockets like reptiles), synapsids (1 hole behind eye sockets like horses), and dinosaurs (230 Mya- Mesozoic).

The Cenozoic:

age of mammals (66 Mya-present), earliest fossils of ape ancestry. 55 Mya- primates, 20 Mya- apes, 7 Mya- hominins, 0.2 Mya- Homo sapiens

phylogenies

evolutionary history of a lineage

Phylogenetic trees

Visual representation of phylogeny

Ernst Haekel:

developed the first real trees, included time scales, trees can demonstrate evolutionary relationship and time.

will henning

worked on fly taxonomy and came up with an approach to phylogenetics that was more systematic; cladistics.

cladistics

relationships among taxa follow a dichotomous branching pattern= branch in pairs
Shared, derived traits (synapomorphies) that provide for relative recentness in common ancestry

Principle of parsimony

Cladogram should be consistent with the inferred pattern of historical relatedness

outgroup

A species known to have or suspected to have split off prior to main diversification event, are necessary to root the tree (a distinct starting point). The outgroup is not a primitive species but it does have ancestral traits and other derived traits

informative character states: can be coded as binary

0: in outgroup considered ancestral
1: a state that is different than outgroup

synapomorphy

shared, derived trait. Trait that is present in more than one group. found in 2 or more speices from common ancestor. trait that is new to the clade and distinguishes that clade from other organisms.

symplesiomorphy

shared, ancestral trait. Present in both Ingroup and outgroup
ex. vertebral colum for vertebrates.

autapomorphy

derived trait found in only one taxon. only in one species. defines a single lineage

ex. long neck for giraffes even within mammals unique for giraffe

homoplasy

represents convergent evolution, character states that are present in more than one taxon but arose independently due to similar environmental pressures or functional needs

winga of bats, birds, insects

homology

character states that are present in more than one taxon but arose from a common ancestor

limbs of humans, cats, whales, bats

polytomy

comb, represents an unresolved tree

systematics

scientific study of all kinds and diversity of organisms and all relationships among them

taxonomy

science of describing, naming, and classifying species of living and fossilized organisms. (Is subject to change)

phylogenetics

the study of evolutionary relationships among organisms

who is carl linnaues

created the first systematic binomial naming system for organisms. Each organisms was given a genus, specific epithet (species name). Created the 3 kingdoms, plants (regnum vegtabile), animals (regnum animals), minerals (regnum Lapideum). Then the smaller categories, class, order,genus, species. His mistakes was that minerals aren’t alive and that humans as different subspecies, also didn’t believe species could evolve

nomenclature general rules

No two species within the same kingdom can have the same name
You can’t name stuff after yourself but you can name it after other people.

Has to grammatically make sense in Latin, but sometimes using indigenous names from the region the specimens are found (ex.tiktaalik roseae- first animals to leave ocean)

Classify organism by domain, kingdom, phylum, subphylum, class, order, family, genus and species

Only genus and species are italicized/ underlined.

Everything except species should be capitalized

Each successive level is nested within another

types

designated example specimen(s) representing a species. Used to determine if an unknown organism belongs to that species. Usually considered the best representation of a species, housed in museums and collections, they must be available to the public and to researchers

alleles

variants of a gene

holotype

single designated specimen used a ‘type’, the ‘name bearer’.

paratype

collection of specimens used a type for a species

genotype

the genetic makeup of an organism, genotypes are heritable. Individuals inherit alleles. One genotype can lead to several different phenotypes depending on how the gene is expressed (genotype + environment = phenotype).

phenotype

the physical manifestation of that sequence is the phenotype, the phenotypes are not inherited. The phenotype (manifestation of the gene) is what selection acts on, can include physiological processes, developmental processes, behaviours

the law of dominance

the dominant allele is expressed in a het (heterozygote).

law of segregation:

all alleles are equally represented in gametes. 50;50 chance of giving one allele to offspring.

law of independent assortment:

genes on different chromosomes assort independently (ex. Colour and shape are independently assorted/inherited).

Polyphenism

more than 1 discrete trait can arise from a single genotype at a single locus (genetic location= gene), due to the influence of environment. Ex. Aphids can be wingless or winged as adults with the same genotype because they have different phenotypes from nutrition profiles during development. This is an irreversible phenotype.

basis of QTL analysis (quantitative trait locus analysis)

study of genetics of extremes- look for variants/loci that are more likely associated with the extreme traits. Sometimes the loci found are not the genes themselves but are genetically linked to the determinant locus.

the LOD scores

the log of odds, ex. lod score of 2 means 100x likelihood of being associated with height.

phenotypic plasticity

the same genotype can manifest as different phenotypes depending on the environment and can change in a lifetime. Ex. Hydrangea flower color can change based on soil pH. If soil has neutral ph- flower is white, if soil is acidic- flower is blue, if solid is basic-flowers are pink. You can take white flower cuttings and grow in soil of different ph and the colour changes, same genotype but different phenotype.

common garden exp

Take two individuals with distinct phenotypes and environments and grow them in the same environment to see if those phenotypes stay. Ex. Blue flower plants tend to grow on east slopes, white flower plants tend to grow on west slopes and then we swap them, after moving to a new environment the plants display a parental phenotype therefore it is most likely genetic.

proteins

the machines of the cell and where variation allows selection. chains of amino acids folded into unique 3D structures, structures can be simple or complex. Structures can be made from one amino acid chain= monomer. Structures can be made from multiple amino acids= oligo or polymer.

dna

a polymer of nucleotides arranged into a double helix, it is double stranded, antiparallel (strands of DNA run in opposite directions of each other), complementary ( A=T, G=C).

hemoglobin is a heterotetramer meaning

2 genes that make one functional protein.

Genes

a sequence of DNA that encodes a trait that can be selected for.

chromsomes

molecules of DNA where there are thousands of genes.

promoter

a sequence of DNA that regulates transcription initiation. Bound by proteins called transcription factors.

mitosis

generates genetically identical daughter cells (diploid to diploid)

meiosis

generates genetic variation and haploid gametes (diploid to haploid)

meiosis- crossing over

physical exchange of DNA between pairs of chromosomes.

Meiosis- independent assortment

2 pairs of chromosomes assort independently (equally likely segregation patterns)

meiosis- random fertilization

sperm that fertilizes isn;t necessarily the strongest, all sperm are different (and eggs).

mutations

change to the genetic sequence or content of an organism, they are common and occur during DNA replication (whenever DNA is being copied there is a chance of error). Many mutagens (things that cause mutations) in the environment like UV light.

are mutations random

Every mutation is equally likely therefore every nucleotide can change. Mutations are random/non directional, and comes before selection, environment determines if the mutation is beneficial, neutral or harmful (not adaptively directed).

how can mutations be inherited

Most mutations are not inherited and they must occur in germline to be heritable, most mutations happen in soma.

point mutations

substitution of a single base with a different base, can be transitions of transversions. Has to happen at the same position on the same strand. In DNA a change in sequence is reflected in mRNA. If a point mutation happens in a coding region it can result in a simple protein mutation, can be synonymous or no synonymous.

transitons

purine with purine (A-G) or pyrimidine (C-T) with pyrimidine

transversions

pyrimidine with purine or vice versa

synonymous

silent, no effect on amino acid sequence= mutational tolerance due to redundancy in the genetic code.

non-synonymous:

change amino acid sequence, can be missense (encodes the wrong aa and may affect the structure/function of a protein), can be non sense (creates a premature stop codon and a truncated protein, this will affect the structure and may affect the function)

indels

these are insertions and deletion of 1+ nucleotides. If indels occur in a protein encoding sequence it causes a frame shift that affects all amino acids/codons after index.

inversions

flipping of a DNA segment within a chromosome, often causes no major changes.

duplication

repeating the same sequence often in tandem with the original ex. ABCD—> ABCBCD (can have dosage effects, often a result of transposable elements- jumping genes)

translocations

originally separate chromosomes to break and fuse with another chromosome

karyotype

the #, size, shape, arrangements of an organism's chromosomes. Change in karyotype can affect fertility of an individual and viability of the offspring.

Aneuploid

unbalanced # of chromosomes, 2n +1 or 2n-1

Polyploid

duplication of entire genome, often results in sterility (esp if off # of chromsomes

Tetraploids

4n, are more fertile than triploids (3n)

Autopolyploids

genome duplication within same species

Allopolyploids

genome amplification due to hybridization between 2 species

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