Patterns of inheritance and variation
- Created by: tiannahewitson1
- Created on: 11-01-17 11:01
The contribution of both environmental and genetic
Keys terms:
Genotype: the genetic makeup of an organism
Phenotype: observable charateristics of an organism
Dominant allele: version of a gene that will always be expressed if present
Recessive allele: version of a gene that will only be expressed if two copies of this allele are present
Homozygous: two identical alleles for a characteristic
Herterozygous: two different alleles for a characteristic
Phenotypes in plants
Chlorosis is when the plant suffers from a lack of chlorophyll, due to:
- lack of light
- mineral deficiencies
- virus infections
Phenotypes in animals
Animal body mass: is determined by environmental and genetic factors.
How sexual reproduction can lead to genetic variat
Genetic variation
Genetic variation is created by the versions of genes you inherit from your parents. There are a number of different variations for each gene. The combination is determined by sexual reproduction involving meiosis and the random fusing of gametes.
Key terms:
Continuous variation:
a characteristic that can take any value within a given range.
This could be genetic and environmental controlled by a number of genes.
An example includes leaf surface area, animal mass, skin colour.
Discontinuous variation:
A characteristic that can only appear in specific values, it is mostly genetic and is controlled by one or two genes.
Examples include blood group, albinism and round and wrinkled pea shape
Codominance
This occurs when two different alleles occur for a gene. The result is both allelesare expressed in the phenotype of an organism.
Sex linkage
Some characteristics are determined by genes carried on the sex chromosomes, these are sex linked.
Haemophilia is an example.
Dihybrid crosses
A dihybrid cross is used to show the inheritance of two different characteristics, caused by 2 genes, which may be located on different pairs of chromosomes.
Phenotypic ratios
Linkage
Linkage means that genes are located on the same chromosome. When the genes that are linked are found on one of the other pairs of chromosomes it is called the autosomal linkage. Linked genes are inherited as one unit and there is no independent assortment.
The recombinant frequency
number of recombinant offspring/ total number of offspring
A recombinant frequency of 50% indicates that there is no linkage and the genes are on seperate chromosomes.
The Chi squared test
If the value is higheer than the significant value we do not have strong evidence to reject our null hypothesis. Therefore we accept that there is no significant difference between what we observed and what we expected.
Epistasis
This is the interaction o9f genes at different loci. gene regulation is a form of epistasis.
Dominant and recessive epistasis
An epistatic genes may influence the activity of other genes as a result of the present of dominant or recessive alleles.
Evolution
Key terms:
Gene pool: sum total of all the genes in a population at a given time
Allele frequency: the relative frequency of a particular allele in a population at a given time
Founder effect:when a few individuals of a species colonise a new area
Directional selection: Natural selection that favours one extreme of a phenotype
Disruptive selection: natural selection that favours both extremes of a phenotype
Stabilising selection: Natural selection tat favours average phenotypes
Population genetics investigates how allele frequencies change over time.
The Hardy Weinberg principle
Model the m athematical relationship between the frequencies of alleles and genotypes in a theoretical population that is stableand not evolving. It states that:
in a stable population with no disturbing factors, the alleles frequencies will remain constant from one generation to the next and there will be no evolution.
p2= frequency of homozygous dominant
2pq= heterozygous
q2= homozygous recessive
factors affecting evolution
- mutation
- sexual selection
- gene flow
- genetic drift
- natural selection
Speciation and artifical selection
Key terms:
Speciation: the formation of a new species through the process of evolution
Allopatric speciation: happens when some members of a population are seperated by physcial barriers
Sympatric speciation: occurs within populations that share the same habitat. Two different species interbreed and create fertile offspring
Polymorphic: display more than one distinct phenotype
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