Artificial Selection (College Board AP® Biology): Study Guide

Ruth Brindle

Written by: Ruth Brindle

Reviewed by: Naomi Holyoak

Updated on

Artificial selection

  • Humans can influence the variation present in other species as follows:

    • individuals with desirable traits are chosen

    • these individuals are bred together

    • offspring from the cross with the desirable traits are chosen and bred together

    • this is repeated over many generations until the frequency of the desired characteristic increases

  • This practice is also known as selective breeding

  • Examples of artificial selection include:

    • increased milk yield from cattle

    • faster racehorses

    • disease-resistant crops

Diagram showing evolution from original wild Brassica to cabbage, cauliflower, broccoli, kale, kohlrabi, and Brussels sprouts, with labelled arrows.
Artificial selection can be used to breed crop varieties with desirable features

Examiner Tips and Tricks

Artificial selection can be used to enhance expression of a single desired trait or to combine several desired traits together in a single individual, e.g. farmers may aim to breed plants with a high yield, disease resistance and the ability to grow in poor soil.

Convergent evolution

  • Convergent evolution occurs when similar environmental selection pressures result in the evolution of similar phenotypic characteristics across unrelated species

    • These traits arise independently but serve the same functional purposes

  • E.g. dolphins and sharks have similar adaptations due to convergent evolution

    • These are both groups of aquatic animals that share a similar body shape, but that belong to different classes

      • Dolphins are mammals and sharks are fish

    • Their streamlined body shapes evolved separately due to similar selective pressures acting in their aquatic environments

Illustration of a shark and dolphin with streamlined bodies, and a butterfly and bat with wings adapted for flight, highlighting evolutionary traits.
Shared selection pressures can result in convergent evolution, resulting in similar adaptations in different species

Artificial selection and convergent evolution

  • Artificial selection occurs when humans actively select for specific traits in organisms; humans create the selective pressure

    • E.g. in food production farmers often apply selective pressures to increase agricultural efficiency and profit

  • Over time these similar selective pressures can drive convergent evolution, causing similar phenotypic traits to arise in unrelated species or populations, e.g.:

    • maize (corn) and sorghum:

      • Artificial selection in different regions has resulted in similar traits, such as high yield and resistance to drought

    • tomatoes and peppers:

      • Selection for larger fruit sizes and vibrant colors has resulted in similar traits in these different species

    • cows, sheep, and goats:

      • Artificial selection for increased milk production in different species has independently resulted in similar physiological traits like larger udders and higher metabolic efficiency

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Ruth Brindle

Author: Ruth Brindle

Expertise: Biology

Ruth graduated from Sheffield University with a degree in Biology and went on to teach Science in London whilst also completing an MA in innovation in Education. With 10 years of teaching experience across the 3 key science disciplines, Ruth decided to set up a tutoring business to support students in her local area. Ruth has worked with several exam boards and loves to use her experience to produce educational materials which make the mark schemes accessible to all students.

Naomi Holyoak

Author: Naomi Holyoak

Expertise: Biology

Naomi graduated from the University of Oxford with a degree in Biological Sciences. She has 8 years of classroom experience teaching Key Stage 3 up to A-Level biology, and is currently a tutor and A-Level examiner. Naomi especially enjoys creating resources that enable students to build a solid understanding of subject content, while also connecting their knowledge with biology’s exciting, real-world applications.