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Encyclopedia > Positive selection

In population genetics, directional selection (sometimes referred to as positive selection) occurs when natural selection favors a single allele and therefore allele frequency continuously shift in one direction. It is in contradistinction to balancing selection where selection may favor multiple alleles, or background selection which removes deleterious mutations from a population. Directional selection is a particular mode or mechanism of natural selection. Population genetics is the study of the distribution of and change in allele frequencies under the influence of the four evolutionary forces: natural selection, genetic drift, mutation and migration. ... Alternative meaning Natural Selection (computer game). ... An allele is any one of a number of alternative forms of the same gene occupying a given locus (position) on a chromosome. ... Allele frequency is a term of population genetics that is used in characterizing the genetic diversity of a species population, or equivalently the richness of its gene pool. ... Balancing selection refers to forms of natural selection which work to maintain genetic polymorphisms (or multiple alleles) within a population. ...


Example

A common example is the peppered moth (Biston betularia). Before the industrial revolution in England (1740?), the peppered moth was mostly found in a light gray form with little black speckled spots. The allele for dark-bodied moths is dominant, while the allele for light-bodied moths is recessive. The light-bodied moths were able to blend in with the light colored lichens and tree bark. The less common black peppered moth was more likely to be eaten by birds. Therefore, the frequency of the dark allele was about 0.01%. During the industrial revolution in England, many of the light-bodied lichens died from sulphur dioxide emissons. The trees became covered with soot from the new coal-burning factories. This led to an increase in bird predation for the light-colored moths (they no longer blended in as well). The dark-bodied moths, however, blended in very well with the trees. Binomial name Biston (moth) betularia Linnaeus, 1758 Subspecies betularia cognataria parva The peppered moth (Biston betularia) is a temperate species of night-flying moth often used by educators as an example of natural selection (see theory of evolution, industrial melanism). ... For other things named Lichen, see: Lichen (disambiguation). ...


As a result, during reproduction, a lot of light-bodied moths were produced, and a few dark-bodied moths. Most of the light-bodied moths didn't survive, while the black-bodied moths continued to survive. Gradually, the allele frequency shifted towards the dominant allele, as more and more dark-bodied moths survived to reproduce.


Sources


  Results from FactBites:
 
Evolution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (9983 words)
The relative importance of natural selection and genetic drift in determining the fate of new mutations also depends on the population size and the strength of selection: when N times s (population size times strength of selection) is small, genetic drift predominates.
Sexual selection occurs when organisms which are more attractive to the opposite sex because of their features reproduce more and thus increase the frequency of those features in the gene pool.
Positive or directional selection increases the frequency of a beneficial mutation, or pushes the mean in either direction.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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