Home > | Evolution 101 |
|
|||
|
Bottlenecks and Founder EffectsGenetic drift can cause big losses of genetic variation for small populations. Population bottlenecks occur when a populations size is reduced for at least one generation. Because genetic drift acts more quickly to reduce genetic variation in small populations, undergoing a bottleneck can reduce a populations genetic variation by a lot, even if the bottleneck doesnt last for very many generations. This is illustrated by the bags of marbles shown below, where, in generation 2, an unusually small draw creates a bottleneck. |
Read more about the importance of random genetic drift. |
|||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||
Reduced genetic variation means that the population may not be able to adapt to new selection pressures, such as climatic change or a shift in available resources, because the genetic variation that selection would act on may have already drifted out of the population.
An example of a bottleneck: Founder effects
For example, the Afrikaner population of Dutch settlers in South Africa is descended mainly from a few colonists. Today, the Afrikaner population has an unusually high frequency of the gene that causes Huntingtons disease, because those original Dutch colonists just happened to carry that gene with unusually high frequency. This effect is easy to recognize in genetic diseases, but of course, the frequencies of all sorts of genes are affected by founder events. |
Learn about Huntingtons Disease.
|
||||||||||||||||
Elephant seal image courtesy of David Smith, UCMP |
Natural Selection |
Search · Site Index · Navigation · Copyright · Credits · Contact Understanding Evolution For Teachers Home · Understanding Evolution Home Read how others have recognized the Understanding Evolution website Spanish translation of Understanding Evolution For Teachers from the Spanish Society of Evolutionary Biology. |