BIOL 3142 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Epistasis, Microevolution, Mutation Rate

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Natural selection: characterizing diversity and explaining change through time. The problem with natural selection is that there was no intervention with something out of this world such as god. The postulates of natural selection, which apply to populations of organisms, are: individuals within populations are variable. By examining a particular trait, we have to be able to observe variation amongst individuals: variation is heritable. The variation among individuals are, at least, in part, passed from parent to offspring: variation in success at surviving or reproducing. There has to be mortality organisms have to be able to forgo reproduction and not pass genes. In every generation, some individuals are more successful at surviving and reproducing than others: non-random mutation. The survival and reproduction of individuals are not random: instead, they are tied to the variation among individuals. The individuals with the most favorable variations (those who are better at surviving and reproducing), are naturally selected.

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