BIOL 1020 Lecture Notes - Lecture 35: Allele Frequency, Sexual Reproduction, Microevolution

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BIOL 1020 Full Course Notes
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BIOL 1020 Full Course Notes
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One misconception is that organisms evolve, in the darwinian sense, during their lifetimes. Natural selection acts on individuals, but only populations evolve. Microevolution is a change in allele frequencies in a population over generations** Mutation and sexual reproduction produce the genetic variation that makes genetic evolution possible. Two processes, mutation and sexual reproduction, produce the variation in gene pools that contributes to differences among individuals. Both discrete and quantitative characters contribute to variation within a population. Discrete characters can be classified on an either-or basis. Quantitative characters vary along a continuum wihin a population. Most species exhibit geographic variation, differences between gene pools of separate populations or population subgroups. Mutations are changes in the nucleotide sequence of dna. Mutations cause new genes and alleles to arise. Only mutations in cells that produce gametes can be passed to offspring. Sexual reproduction can shuffle existing alleles into new combinations.

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