ScatMan;4538972; said:
it's more than a possibility, it's almost a certainty that some of the billions of base pairs will be changed during the process of dna duplicating itself.
'Almost a certianty' (interesting wording) that something random will happen and be passed on to offspring. Even if 1, 10, or 100 base pairs
might change, you then have to worry about whether that potential change can affect the organism in any significant way and also whether that change actually will be passed on to any offspring.
From
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/mutations.html (linked from your berkely example)
"[4] The human genome has 3 billion base pairs.
The average rate of point mutations is about 20-30 in a billion per individual. Almost all point mutations in multi-cellular organisms are strictly neutral. In human beings 90-97% of the DNA is "junk DNA" that does nothing (as best as can be determined.) One third of the changes to codons (sections of DNA that code for proteins) are silent; that is, the DNA changes, but the the amino acid coded for remains the same. Thus 93-98% of all point mutations in humans are strictly neutral."
Thus 93-98% of all point mutations in humans are strictly neutral. So, let's see, I'll go with the high average:
30/1,000,000,000 = 0.00000003 (.000003% chance a point mutation will occur in a base pair)
Potentially 7% of those point mutations are not neutral. 93-98% will have absolutely no effect at all, so I will discount them.
.00000003 / .07 = some infinately small percentage (4.285714285714286e-7)
Now maybe half of that miniscule percentage will be a harmful mutation, which very well might kill the specimen outright. Making sense?
For this next part we'll forget about the chances of whether a mutation is helpfull, neutral, or harmfull. We'll just go off of the .000003% chance a mutation might occur in a base pair.
Now an averave of 30 point mutations in 1 billion base pairs might present 'almost a certianty' to you. From the first paper I found on a
crayfish genome, only 15,895 base pairs are present in Cherax Destructor. I can't imagine Marmokrebs' genome being all that dissimilar. 30 in 1 Billion is a .000003% chance of a base pair being subject to a point mutation. That is extremely low odds. When looking at billions of base pairs in a human, you likely will see it happen (though there is always the 'chance' that it won't). The 'average chance' would significantly drop in a species with only 15,895 base pairs. Overall there is a .047685% chance that ANY point mutation will develop at all in a crayfish. You have a much higher chance of
absolutely no point mutations.
This means that approximately 99.952315% of the time, marmokrebs will be 100% genetically identical.
So .047685% of individuals actually might develop one of these point mutations. Given the fact that only 7% of point mutations mentioned above are not neutral, and that half of those may outright kill the specimen, I think we can reasonably conclude that genetic variation within this species is extremely rare, borderline impossible.
The mutation then still needs the ability to be passed on to offspring too. Wow, that's a small number..
I feel fairly comfortable now stating that Marmokrebs
are 100% Genetically Identical. Genetic diversity in this species
may be possible, but it is an
extremely remote chance.
ScatMan;4538972; said:
look around man, i can't do all your homework. dna is not perfectly stable.
I do my own homework, thanks. Actually learned a bit about the human and crayfish genomes, and mutation effects on genetic diversity.
ScatMan;4538972; said:
they're not my theories, they're scientific fact.
I like it when the facts come out.
ScatMan;4538994; said:
another way to say it is: they are 99.99999% identical with an almost zero chance of being 100% identical, considering the improbability (virtual impossibility) of every single one of the billions of base pairs (t,c,g,a) replicating themselves perfectly.
No, with all of the above, I think I prefer my way of saying it.
