17.04 Selection Pressures and Survival
1. Survival and Reproduction
- Survival: Not all individuals in a population survive to adulthood. Survival can be influenced by random events or by specific adaptive traits that enhance an organism’s ability to live in its environment.
- Reproduction: Successful reproduction ensures that an organism’s genes are passed on to the next generation. Traits that improve reproductive success become more common over time.
- Fitness:
- Definition: Fitness refers to an organism’s ability to survive and reproduce, thereby transmitting its alleles (gene variants) to offspring.
- Importance: High fitness increases the likelihood that an organism’s genes will be represented in future generations.
2. Example: Coat Color in Rabbits
- Genetic Basis:
- Agouti (Brown) Fur: Dominant allele (A). Provides effective camouflage in natural habitats, reducing the risk of predation.
- White Fur: Recessive allele (a). Lacks effective camouflage, making individuals more conspicuous to predators.
- Selection Dynamics:
- Camouflage Advantage: Brown rabbits blend into their environment, enhancing survival and increasing their chances of reproducing.
- Predation Risk: White rabbits are more easily spotted by predators, decreasing their survival and reproductive success.
- Evolutionary Outcome:
- Over time, the frequency of the agouti (A) allele increases in the population.
- The frequency of the white (a) allele decreases and may eventually vanish if selective pressures remain consistent.
3. Impact of Predation as a Selection Pressure
- Definition: Predation is a natural selection pressure where predators influence the survival and reproductive success of prey based on specific traits.
- Mechanism:
- Traits that reduce the likelihood of being eaten (e.g., camouflage, speed) are favored.
- Traits that increase visibility to predators are selected against.
- Long-Term Effects:
- Enhanced traits become more prevalent within the population.
- Less advantageous traits diminish in frequency, potentially disappearing.
4. Types of Selection in Populations
- Natural selection can manifest in various forms, each shaping populations differently:
a. Stabilizing Selection
- Definition: Stabilizing selection maintains the status quo by favoring average phenotypes and reducing variation.
- Effect on Population:
- Allele Frequencies: Remain relatively constant.
- Genetic Diversity: Decreases as extreme phenotypes are selected against.
- Example: Agouti Rabbits
- Optimal Trait: Brown fur provides the best camouflage.
- Outcome: Selection maintains the dominant brown coat color, preventing extreme variations like unusually light or dark fur.
b. Directional Selection
- Definition: Directional selection favors one extreme phenotype over others, causing a shift in allele frequencies in one direction.
- Effect on Population:
- Allele Frequencies: Shift towards the favored extreme.
- Genetic Diversity: Can increase if the environment continues to favor the extreme trait.
- Examples:
- Rabbits in Snowy Conditions:
- Scenario: Increased snowfall leads to white environments.
- Selection Pressure: White rabbits gain camouflage advantage.
- Outcome: Frequency of the white (a) allele increases.
- Industrial Melanism in the Peppered Moth (Biston betularia):
- Pre-Industrial Era:
- Dominant Form: Speckled (c) moths blend with lichen-covered trees.
- Selection Pressure: Natural predation favors speckled moths in unpolluted areas.
- Industrial Era:
- Environmental Change: Pollution darkens tree bark by killing lichens.
- Favored Form: Black (C) moths blend with darkened trees.
- Outcome: Frequency of the black (C) allele increases near industrial areas.
- Post-1970s Environmental Reversal:
- Pollution Control: Reduction in pollution allows lichens to regrow.
- Selection Pressure Reversed: Speckled moths regain camouflage advantage.
- Outcome: Frequency of the speckled (c) allele increases.
- Pre-Industrial Era:
- Rabbits in Snowy Conditions:
c. Disruptive Selection
- Definition: Disruptive selection favors both extreme phenotypes over intermediate forms, promoting diversity within a population.
- Effect on Population:
- Allele Frequencies: Increase for alleles associated with extreme traits.
- Genetic Diversity: Increases as multiple phenotypes are maintained.
- Example:
- Body Size in a Population:
- Scenario: Both very large and very small body sizes confer survival advantages in different niches.
- Outcome: Both large and small individuals thrive, while intermediate sizes become less common.
- Body Size in a Population:
5. Mutation and Selection
- Mutation:
- Definition: Random changes in the DNA sequence that can create new alleles.
- Role in Evolution: Provides the genetic variation upon which natural selection acts.
- Interaction with Selection:
- Mutation Rate: The rate at which new alleles (e.g., the black (C) allele in moths) appear is generally constant and not influenced by environmental factors.
- Selection Pressure: Determines which alleles increase or decrease in frequency based on their impact on fitness.
6. Directional Selection and Antibiotic Resistance in Bacteria
- Antibiotic Resistance:
- Mechanism:
- Resistance genes often reside on plasmids, which can be transferred between bacteria through horizontal gene transfer.
- Random mutations can also confer resistance (e.g., MRSA producing penicillinase).
- Selection Pressure:
- Presence of Antibiotics: Environments with antibiotics kill susceptible bacteria.
- Survival of Resistant Strains: Bacteria with resistance genes survive and reproduce, spreading the resistance alleles rapidly.
- Mechanism:
- Example: Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA):
- Mutation: Development of penicillinase enzyme that deactivates methicillin.
- Spread: Resistant bacteria proliferate quickly, potentially growing from a single bacterium to billions within 24 hours.
- Human Influence:
- Overuse of Antibiotics: Increases the selection pressure for resistant strains, accelerating the spread of resistance.
- Hospital Settings: High antibiotic usage and close patient proximity facilitate the rapid dissemination of resistant bacteria.
- Interventions:
- Restricting Antibiotic Use: Reducing unnecessary prescriptions helps slow the emergence and spread of resistance.
- Outcome: Implementation of stricter antibiotic use guidelines post-2007 led to a decline in MRSA cases.
7. Key Terms
- Antibiotic Resistance: The ability of bacteria to survive and proliferate despite the presence of antibiotic drugs, often due to genetic mutations or acquisition of resistance genes.
- Selection Pressure: Environmental factors (e.g., predators, climate, antibiotics) that influence the survival and reproductive success of organisms, thereby affecting allele frequencies in a population.
- Natural Selection: The process by which individuals with favorable traits are more likely to survive and reproduce, leading to an increase in the frequency of those traits in the population over generations.
- Polymorphism: The presence of two or more distinct phenotypes within a population, maintained by factors such as disruptive selection or varying environmental conditions.
- Fitness: An organism’s ability to survive and reproduce, thereby passing its genes to the next generation.
- Allele Frequency: The proportion of a specific allele relative to the total number of alleles for that gene in a population.