BIOLOGY 1M03 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Frequency-Dependent Selection, Endogamy, Advantageous

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What changes allele frequencies: expected genotype given allele freq. If not violated then the expectation is met. Hardy-weinberg principle: they started with the simplest situation, a gene with two alleles, a1 and a2, the freq of a1 is represented by "p" and the freq of a2 is represented by "q". Because there are only two alleles p + q = 1. In this situation, three genotypes are possible: a1a2, a1a2, a2a2. Example of evolution by natural selection: industrial melanism. Hwe example: getting hwe genotypes from allele frequencies (assuming random mating) *** these are the genotype frequencies only if the population is in hwe*** Another example (does not require hwe): getting allele freq from genotype freq. This is true for a biallelic locus whether or not the population is in hwe. For population in hwe, p^2 +2pq + q^2 = 1. A2a2= q^2 = 0. 09: the hardy-weinberg principle makes two fundamental assumptions:

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