Coevolution Fitness Natural Selection: Discontinuous Variation
Coevolution Fitness Natural Selection: Discontinuous Variation
Introduction
- Genetic variation stems from independent assortment, crossing over, random mating, random
fertilisation, and mutation. Genetic variation produces phenotypic variation.
- Mutations that occur in somatic cells (body cells) cannot be passed of to the offsprings of that
organism and often have no effect at all on the organism. But, mutations which occur during
gametogenesis, they may be passed on.
A mutated gamete would fuse with another gamete to form a zygote which would divide to
form another organism with the mutation in all of its cells.
- Variation in phenotype due to the environment cannot be passed down to offspring.
- Qualitative data falls into clearly distinguishable categories (e.g. blood types ABO). These show
discontinuous variation. The characteristics of this type of variation are:
Different alleles at a single gene locus can have large effects on the phenotype.
Each different gene can have quite different effects on the phenotype.
- Quantitative data can be spread across a range between two extremes (e.g. height, weight).
Since quantitative differences can be small and difficult to distinguish they show continuos
variation. The characteristics of this type of variation are:
Different alleles at a single gene locus have small effects on the phenotype.
Different genes have the same (usually additive) effect on the phenotype.
Many genes can combine to affect a certain phenotypic trait (polygenes).
- In polygenetic traits, the more genes affecting the trait, the smaller differences between
groups (more continuous).
- Even if some of the genes are linked, due to meiosis during crossing over variation will be
restored.
- Environmental effects also smooth out the differences between phenotypic classes.