BIO220H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Effective Population Size, Selective Breeding, Genetic Drift

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12 Jan 2017
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BIO220H1 Full Course Notes
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BIO220H1 Full Course Notes
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The world has 50,000 edible plants: rice, maize wheat: 3 species account for 60% of food energy, abundant genetic variation exist in wild ancestors of food crops, but typically, only a few genotypes are grown or harvested. Wild ancestors are still extant: paradox: why are humans only using a tiny subset of what is available. Huge number of crops domesticated in the near east and middle east. Cradle of civilization ability to use agriculture and create large societies are linked: plants include: barley and wheat (and beer), grapes (wine), lentils, peas, olives, dates, chickpeas/garbanzos, flax. Severe bottleneck: only a tiny subset of individuals of the wild population are chosen to be cultivated. Strong artificial selection: humans breed and retain the best performing crop plants: strong selection on germination timing, seed size, nutrition. Domesticated maize has much more nutritional value than the wild plant teosinte.

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