This course gives you a solid grounding in one of biology's most fundamental disciplines, taking you from the basics of how genes build traits all the way through to the evolution of complex animal behaviour. You'll learn how mutations generate new traits, how natural selection, sexual selection, and genetic drift cause those traits to spread, and how cost-benefit optimality modelling can help us predict which behaviours evolve and why.
Whether you're new to evolutionary biology or looking to deepen your understanding, this course offers a clear and engaging pathway through the subject. Along the way, you'll encounter fascinating real-world applications — from antibiotic resistance and cancer treatment to climate change and even the evolution of folklore.
By the end of the course, you'll be able to explain where new traits come from, why some spread and others don't, and how evolutionary thinking can be applied to solve real-world problems across medicine, conservation, and beyond. If you've ever wondered why living things are the way they are, this course will help you find out.
This module will introduce the terms 'genes', 'proteins' and 'phenotypes' to you, explaining how genes code for proteins and proteins build phenotypes. We will then introduce the concept of mutations generating new alleles, look at how mutations occur and explore the different possible consequences of mutation on the phenotype.
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10 vidéos2 lectures4 devoirs
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10 vidéos•Total 68 minutes
Welcome to the course•5 minutes
The origin of new traits - Introduction•2 minutes
Case study 1A: From one, many•8 minutes
Case study 1B: From one, many•7 minutes
Case study 1C: From one, many•6 minutes
Lecture 1A: The origin of new traits•9 minutes
Lecture 1B: The origin of new traits•7 minutes
Lecture 1C: The origin of new traits•10 minutes
Case study 2A: The curious case of the crickets who ceased chirping•6 minutes
Case study 2B: The curious case of the crickets who ceased chirping•9 minutes
2 lectures•Total 23 minutes
Course Outline•3 minutes
Resources•20 minutes
4 devoirs•Total 57 minutes
Quiz: From one, many•9 minutes
Quiz: The origin of new traits•9 minutes
Quiz: The curious case of the crickets who ceased chirping•9 minutes
Assessment: The origin of new traits•30 minutes
The spread of new traits
Module 2•3 heures à terminer
Détails du module
In this module, you will be introduced to the different modes of selection that can operate in natural populations and how they can affect fitness. We will look at positive and negative selection (one allele is better/worse than the rest) first. Then we will look at the mystery of why sometimes multiple alleles are maintained in populations, with sickle-cell anaemia offering a good example of balancing selection.
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8 vidéos1 lecture5 devoirs
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8 vidéos•Total 60 minutes
The spread of new traits - Introduction•3 minutes
Case study 3A: Learning to milk it•8 minutes
Case study 3B: Learning to milk it•10 minutes
Lecture 2A: The spread of new traits•7 minutes
Lecture 2B: The spread of new traits•10 minutes
Lecture 2C: The spread of new traits•10 minutes
Case study 4A•6 minutes
Case study 4B•8 minutes
1 lecture•Total 30 minutes
Resources•30 minutes
5 devoirs•Total 65 minutes
Quiz: Learning to milk it•9 minutes
Knowledge check: The spread of new traits•8 minutes
Quiz: The spread of new traits•9 minutes
Quiz: Rock, paper, lizards!•9 minutes
Assessment: The spread of new traits•30 minutes
More than just surviving
Module 3•3 heures à terminer
Détails du module
We have so far tried to explain the spread of traits by considering how they increase the probability of an organism surviving, just like Darwin did initially. In this module, we look at two alternative explanations for why a trait might spread: sexual selection and genetic drift. When considering sexual selection, you will learn about the difference between intrasexual and intersexual selection and how these can lead to the evolution of traits that increase mating success despite reducing survival probability. We will also look at the idea of non-adaptive evolution and how sometimes an allele can increase in frequency despite no survival or reproductive benefits. Iris colour variation in humans is discussed as an example of genetic drift.
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7 vidéos1 lecture4 devoirs
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7 vidéos•Total 65 minutes
More than just surviving - Introduction•3 minutes
Case study 5A: Too big to handle?•8 minutes
Case study 5B: Too big to handle?•8 minutes
Lecture 3A: More than just surviving•13 minutes
Lecture 3B: More than just surviving•11 minutes
Case study 6A: The legend of Old Blue•12 minutes
Case study 6B: The legend of Old Blue•11 minutes
1 lecture•Total 30 minutes
Resources•30 minutes
4 devoirs•Total 57 minutes
Quiz: Too big to handle?•9 minutes
Quiz: More than just surviving•9 minutes
Quiz: The legend of Old Blue•9 minutes
Assessment: More than just surviving•30 minutes
The evolution of behaviour
Module 4•3 heures à terminer
Détails du module
Behavioural adaptation is the most complex and impressive form of adaptation. In this module, we look at how the cost-benefit framework of optimally modelling, along with the concept of trade-offs, can let us understand the evolution of animal behaviour. We will look at a worked example – how high should a crow fly? The concept of proximate and ultimate causation is also discussed here, helping you to see how 'why' questions can be answered in biology.
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7 vidéos2 lectures4 devoirs
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7 vidéos•Total 74 minutes
The evolution of behaviour - Introduction•2 minutes
Case study 7A: The Mystery of the Defecating Sloth•12 minutes
Case study 7B: The Mystery of the Defecating Sloth•14 minutes
Lecture 4A: The evolution of behaviour•9 minutes
Lecture 4B: The evolution of behaviour•15 minutes
Case study 8A: Do digger wasps commit the concorde fallacy?•12 minutes
Case study 8B: Do digger wasps commit the concorde fallacy?•10 minutes
2 lectures•Total 53 minutes
VIDEO: The 'Busy' Life of the Sloth•3 minutes
Resources•50 minutes
4 devoirs•Total 57 minutes
Quiz: The Mystery of the Defecating Sloth•9 minutes
Quiz: The evolution of behaviour•9 minutes
Quiz: Wasps and the concorde fallacy•9 minutes
Assessment: The evolution of behaviour•30 minutes
Applying evolutionary biology
Module 5•3 heures à terminer
Détails du module
Evolutionary biology is a fascinating science in its own right, but this final teaching week will help you see some of the practical applications of what you have been learning about. We look at evolutionary medicine (e.g., the Old Friends hypothesis, antibiotic resistance, and tumour resistance to chemotherapy) and predicting responses to climate change. We gesture towards some of the many other applications possible, from reconstructing galaxy evolution to understanding the evolution of Red Riding Hood.
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9 vidéos1 lecture4 devoirs
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