BIOL 1004 Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Allele Frequency, Genetic Drift, Microevolution

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Evolution of populations: genetic drift and gene flow. Microevolution is the change in the allele frequency in a population over generations. Genetic variation is essential for microevolution to occur. 4 mechanisms can cause microevolution: mutations, selection, genetic drift, and gene flow. The hardy-weingberg principles allow to test if a locus has been evolving in a population. When a population of flowers travel by wind, the seeds will land randomly. If the seeds happen to fall where there is sufficient nutrients, those seeds will produce more flowers. If the seeds fall where there is insufficient nutrients, they will not produce more flowers. In this instance, there is a random chance whether or not the flowers of a specific colour will reproduce. This can change the allele frequency for certain colours over even just a few generations. This is genetic drift, and is much more noticeable in smaller populations.

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