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4.4.4 Directional & Stabilising Selection
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In natural selection, populations evolve in response to changes in their environment. Two key types of selection are directional selection and stabilising selection.
1. Directional Selection
Definition: Occurs when environmental conditions change, favouring individuals with phenotypes that are suited to the new conditions.
Effect: Over time, the mean phenotype shifts towards the favoured traits.
Example:
Antibiotic resistance in bacteria:
A mutation in some bacteria allows them to produce the enzyme penicillinase, which breaks down penicillin.
These resistant bacteria survive, reproduce, and pass on the advantageous allele.
Over generations, the population becomes increasingly resistant to penicillin.
Graph: The curve shifts towards one extreme phenotype.
2. Stabilising Selection
Definition: Occurs when environmental conditions remain stable, favouring individuals with phenotypes closest to the mean.
Effect: Reduces variation within the population and selects against extremes.
Example:
Human birth weights:
Babies with a birth weight around 3–4 kg are more likely to survive.
Those with very low or very high weights are less likely to survive, and these extremes are selected against.
Graph: The curve becomes narrower, with most individuals clustering around the mean.
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Key Points
Directional Selection results in a shift towards one extreme phenotype.
Stabilising Selection maintains the population's average phenotype by removing extremes.
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Exam Tip
When explaining examples of directional or stabilising selection, always include:
The environmental pressure.
The phenotypes favoured or selected against.
The resulting change in allele frequency or population distribution.
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