IB 10.3 Student Notes
IB 10.3 Student Notes
IB 10.3 Student Notes
Gene pools:
1|Page
Do some research and explain what genetic drift is:
How does genetic drift sometimes suddenly lead to the loss of an allele from a population?
Speciation:
Speciation is the formation of a new species by the splitting of an existing population. Various barriers can
isolate the gene pool of one population from that of the other. Speciation may occur when this happens.
2|Page
1. Allopatric speciation: Geographic isolation
3|Page
3. Sympatric speciation: Behavioural isolation
4|Page
Gradual and abrupt speciation:
5|Page
1. Stabilizing selection
Occurs where environmental conditions are largely unchanging. This does not lead to evolution, but it
maintains a favorable characteristic and the alleles responsible for it. Useless or harmful variants and
abnormalities are eliminated.
Explain how birth weights in babies are an example for stabilizing selection:
2. Directional selection:
Directional selection is a type of natural selection that favors one extreme phenotype over the mean or other
extreme. This phenomenon is usually seen in environments that have changed over time. Changes in weather,
climate, or food availability lead to directional selection, but also human interaction can speed up directional
selection.
6|Page
3. Disruptive selection:
In disruptive selection individuals from the center of a phenotype are removed because natural selection
favours both ends of the phenotypic variation. Over time, the two extreme variations will become more
common and the intermediate states will be less common or lost. As a result, it is likely that the gene pool will
eventually split into two distinct gene pools – new species can be formed.
7|Page
8|Page
Speciation in the genus Allium by polyploidy
What is polyploidy?
The genus Allium comprises of monocot flowering plant and includes the onion, garlic, chives, shallot, leek,
welsh onion. In many of these species chromosome doubling has created a large number of different
phenotypes, which results in a number of reproductively isolated but similar populations
9|Page
Advantages of polyploidy:
1. Hybrid vigor (Heterosis): Because of gene duplication, polyploids become more vigorous than their diploid
progenitors.
2. Gene redundancy shields polyploids from the deleterious effect of mutations. Why and how?
3. Asexual reproduction and self-fertilisation enables polyploids in the absence of sexual mates.
10 | P a g e
Read the text on page 10 and answer the questions below:
What is the number of chromosomes in the red visacha (Tympanoctomys barrerae)? Why does this seem to
be due to polyploidy?
11 | P a g e