The Process of Evolution by Natural Selection
- Evolution requires that allele frequencies change with time in populations
- Evolution is defined as the cumulative change in the heritable characteristics (genes) of a population over time
- Organisms cannot change their species' phenotype significantly without an underlying change in their genetic makeup
- The factors that drive evolution are
- Mutations causing new alleles to come into being
- Selection pressures that favour the existence of certain alleles and oppose that of others
- A key consideration is that evolution has no purpose
- There is no conscious change of genetic makeup in order to take advantage of changes in conditions
- Mutations and selection pressures occur entirely at random
- A species only evolves by virtue of a lucky combination of advantageous alleles and selection pressures
- Organisms developing other alleles that put an affected individual at a selective disadvantage will not survive to reproduce and pass on those alleles
- Changes in allele frequencies can sometimes be referred to as genetic drift
- Evolution can happen within a species before speciation occurs
- An example is the many dog breeds that all exist within the same species, Canis familiaris
- Whilst many breeds have been selectively bred artificially for aesthetic reasons by humans (or to perform valuable tasks like seeing-eye dogs), most common dog breeds are capable of interbreeding to produce fertile offspring, often referred to as mongrels
- Population size has an effect on evolution
- In a small population, random events such as climate change can have a dramatic effect on the frequency of alleles
- By contrast, in a large population, there is more capacity to absorb small fluctuations in allele frequency
- When an allele is put under selective pressure, its frequency drops and sometimes falls to zero as a more advantageous allele becomes more abundant, or becomes the only allele in the gene pool
Example of changes in allele frequency driving evolution
- The peppered moth (Biston betularia) is a well-documented case study of evolution by natural selection
- In the early 18th century in the northern UK, the light grey-winged form of this moth prevailed
- These moths were well-camouflaged against the light-coloured bark and lichens of their host tree species
- Black-winged moths (which carried the allele for melanism) fared badly as they were easy for predators (mainly birds) to spot against the light background
- During the industrial revolution (mid-late 18th Century), soot from coal-burning factories and house chimneys coated many of the trees in the area, turning them dark or black
- This led to an increase in predation of light-winged (non-melanistic) moths whose camouflage was no longer so effective
- The dark-winged moths became the predominant variety as the frequency of the melanism allele increased over successive generations of moths
- Analysis of the populations throughout this period revealed the following changes in allele frequency