BIOL 206 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Population Bottleneck, Allele Frequency, Genetic Drift

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Small population, chance events produce outcomes that differ from theoretical expectations. Genetic drift: variation in relative frequency of different genotypes within a small population size. Sampling error: results from finite population size: fewer samples results in smaller deviations, sampling error forms in zygote formation, but can also form anywhere in life cycle, no adaptation involved, all by chance. In turn, sampling error results in genetic drift: cause of random changes in allele frequencies between generations. Genetic drift results in evolution, but no adaptations: can cause allele frequencies to change, smaller populations results in greater drift, can cause: Population bottlenecks: severe population decrease followed by a population increase: may occur due to an environmental event (like a hurricane reducing the population) Movement of alleles between populations: simple genetic mixing process. F(a)1= (1-m)f(a1)+mf(a2: where m=migration rate (a fraction, a1= allele 1, a2= allele 2.

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