Hopi Hoekstra (Harvard University) Part 2: Genetics of Morphology – Video

Posted: February 21, 2013 at 1:41 pm




Hopi Hoekstra (Harvard University) Part 2: Genetics of Morphology
The Genetic Basis of Evolutionary Change in Morphology and Behavior Overview In Part 1, Hoekstra explains that her lab is working to understand how changes in an organism #39;s DNA result in adaptations that allow the organism to better survive or reproduce in the wild. She uses wild mice in the genus Peromyscus (commonly referred to as deer mice) as a model system because they are found in large numbers in many different habitats, allowing for many examples of adaptation to local environments, and they also thrive in a lab environment. In Part 2, Hoekstra explains how members of her lab studied the effects of a phenotypic adaptation, in this case coat color, on the ability of mouse populations to survive in different habitats. By crossing mice with light and dark coats and analyzing the genomes of the offspring, Hoekstra and her colleagues were able to identify several genes, and specific mutations in those genes, that determine coat color. Amazingly, one of the same mutations may have determined coat color in ancient mammoths! The link between genes and behavior is the focus of Hoekstra #39;s third talk. By studying burrowing behavior in two species of mice, both in the lab and in the wild, Hoekstra showed that burrowing is not strictly a learned behavior and is, in fact, controlled by a small number of genes. Biography After a short stint studying political science in college, Hopi Hoekstra switched her focus to biology. She received her BA in Integrative Biology from UC ...

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Hopi Hoekstra (Harvard University) Part 2: Genetics of Morphology - Video

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