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Genetic Drift Founders and Bottleneck

Genetic Drift Founders and Bottleneck

FromMy AP Biology Thoughts


Genetic Drift Founders and Bottleneck

FromMy AP Biology Thoughts

ratings:
Length:
5 minutes
Released:
Jan 20, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

My AP Biology ThoughtsEpisode #11Welcome to My AP Biology Thoughts podcast, my name is Pauline and I am your host for episode #11 called Unit 7 Evolution: Genetic Drift Founders and Bottleneck. Today we will be discussing one of the four evolutionary forces called genetic drift and its two examples.Segment 1: Introduction to Genetic Drift Founders and BottleneckThere are 4 evolutionary forces that drive changes in a population’s genetics; these include natural selection, sexual selection, genetic drift, and gene flowThe Founders and bottleneck effect fall under the evolutionary force of genetic driftGenetic drift consists of random non-adaptive changes due to a random eventThe Founders effect takes place when members of a population migrate to a new area. The founder's effect is usually a catalyst to adaptive radiation which is an evolutionarily rapid change between populationsThe bottleneck effect occurs when a population experiences a catastrophic event (due to natural disaster, overharvesting, or habitat loss) that results in the survival of only a small number of individuals, who represent only a fraction of the genetic diversity that was present in the original population. Segment 2: Example of Genetic Drift Founders and BottleneckFounders effect: This is exemplified by the Eastern Pennsylvania Amish population. Their ancestors migrated from Germany to found their community. The Amish typically marry from within their own community and are isolated, so genetic mutations tend to persist. For this reason, the Ellis-van Creveld syndrome is much more prevalent among their population. The main symptoms of this disorder is short stature and abnormal numbers of fingers and toes. Bottleneck effect: A common example of this involves the Northern elephant seals. Humans inflicted upon them a population bottleneck through seal hunting. Hunters harvested the Northern elephant seal for its blubber to make oil. The blubber of one adult male elephant seal could produce up to 25 gallons of oil. By the late 1880’s, the seals were considered functionally extinct due to excessive harvesting. The effective breeding population reached a low point of 20-100 individuals. These survivors were moved to Guadalupe island to recover.https://www.thoughtco.com/what-is-the-founder-effect-4586652https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/species/northern-elephant-seal
Released:
Jan 20, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

The AP Biology Thoughts podcast is created by students for AP Biology students. At the end of each unit, students select topics to define, provide examples, and to make deeper connections to other units and the course.