BIOLOGY:CONCEPTS+APPL.(LOOSELEAF)
BIOLOGY:CONCEPTS+APPL.(LOOSELEAF)
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781305967359
Author: STARR
Publisher: CENGAGE L
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Chapter 40, Problem 2CT
Summary Introduction

To determine:

The reason why a decline in genetic diversity is linked to a decline in population size.

Introduction:

The total number of genetic variations present in the genome of a particular species is called genetic diversity. Genetic diversity occurs due to mutation. It also helps the population to adapt to different environmental conditions.

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As we saw last week, population size is important. Ideally, this means you started with a lot of genetically diverse founders, but of course that isn’t always the case. In the case of the Española Galapagos tortoises it was 12 females and 2 males. So, often you have to grow your population to stabilize it and ensure there isn’t an unacceptable loss of genetic diversity over time, even if that genetic diversity is low. If you think back to the math from last week and do a little not so fancy algebra, you can see that genetic deterioration occurs at a rate that is the inverse of genetic retention, which you probably remember is  1- (1/2Ne) Assume that the Española Galapagos tortoise captive population started with an Ne/N ratio of 0.7. Calculate their rate of loss of genetic diversity given their original population size of 14 tortoises (N=14). You will first need to solve for Ne, then plug Ne into the rate of loss of genetic diversity formula. Now let’s work on growing the population.…
The current wild population is estimated to be about 50 individuals. However, a new threat to red wolves has arisen: hybridization with coyotes (Canis latrans), which have become more numerous in the areas inhabited by red wolves. Although red wolves and coyotes differ in morphology and DNA, they are capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring. Social behavior is the main reproductive barrier between the species and is more easily overcome when same-species mates are rare. For this reason, some people think that the endangered status of the red wolf should be withdrawn and resources should not be spent to protect what is not a “pure” species.
It is well known among population geneticists that a population bottleneck in the past history of a species be observed in a low effective population size for many future generations.  It is known that the human population size crashed to about 10,000 individuals at about 70-100,000 years ago.  Do the effective population sizes of the chimpanzee and the gorilla suggest that this event (ash from an eruption in Indonesia) did not cause as significant a bottleneck effect in these primates as it did in humans? Give a reason for your answer.
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