Sections
                          Key Terms
                      Key Terms
- adaptive evolution
 - increase in frequency of beneficial alleles and decrease in deleterious alleles due to selection
 
- allele frequency
 - (also, gene frequency) rate at which a specific allele appears within a population
 
- assortative mating
 - when individuals tend to mate with those who are phenotypically similar to themselves
 
- bottleneck effect
 - magnification of genetic drift as a result of natural events or catastrophes
 
- cline
 - gradual geographic variation across an ecological gradient
 
- directional selection
 - selection that favors phenotypes at one end of the spectrum of existing variation
 
- diversifying selection
 - selection that favors two or more distinct phenotypes
 
- evolutionary fitness
 - (also, Darwinian fitness) individual’s ability to survive and reproduce
 
- fitness
 - measure of successful reproduction, the passing on alleles to the next generation
 
- founder effect
 - event that initiates an allele frequency change in part of the population, which is not typical of the original population
 
- frequency-dependent selection
 - selection that favors phenotypes that are either common (positive frequency-dependent selection) or rare (negative frequency-dependent selection)
 
- gene flow
 - flow of alleles in and out of a population due to the migration of individuals or gametes
 
- gene pool
 - all of the alleles carried by all of the individuals in the population
 
- genetic drift
 - effect of chance on a population’s gene pool
 
- genetic structure
 - distribution of the different possible genotypes in a population
 
- genetic variance
 - diversity of alleles and genotypes in a population
 
- genotype frequency
 - the proportion of a specific genotype in a population relative to all other genotypes for those genes that are present in the population
 
- geographical variation
 - differences in the phenotypic variation between populations that are separated geographically
 
- good genes hypothesis
 - theory of sexual selection that argues individuals develop impressive ornaments to show off their efficient metabolism or ability to fight disease
 
- handicap principle
 - theory of sexual selection that argues only the fittest individuals can afford costly traits
 
- Hardy-Weinberg principle of equilibrium
 - a stable, non-evolving state of a population in which allelic frequencies are stable over time
 
- heritability
 - fraction of population variation that can be attributed to its genetic variance
 
- honest signal
 - trait that gives a truthful impression of an individual’s fitness
 
- inbreeding
 - mating of closely related individuals
 
- inbreeding depression
 - increase in abnormalities and disease in inbreeding populations
 
- macroevolution
 - broader scale evolutionary changes seen over paleontological time
 
- microevolution
 - changes in a population’s genetic structure
 
- modern synthesis
 - overarching evolutionary paradigm that took shape by the 1940s and is generally accepted today
 
- nonrandom mating
 - changes in a population’s gene pool due to mate choice or other forces that cause individuals to mate with certain phenotypes more than others
 
- polymorphisms
 - variations in phenotype within individuals of a population
 
- population genetics
 - study of how selective forces change the allele frequencies in a population over time
 
- population variation
 - distribution of phenotypes in a population
 
- relative fitness
 - individual’s ability to survive and reproduce relative to the rest of the population
 
- selective pressure
 - environmental factor that causes one phenotype to be better than another
 
- sexual dimorphism
 - phenotypic difference between the males and females of a population
 
- stabilizing selection
 - selection that favors average phenotypes