BIOB51H3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 14: Assortative Mating, Heterozygote Advantage, Zygote

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It"s a random evolutionary change in a population that arises when a new group moves somewhere to form a new population and if it"s a small group, it may not have the same allele frequency as its original population. With migration, the allele frequency in the migrants is equal to the allele frequency of the source population. Amish religious group that does not marry outside of its own members. One of the founders was heterozygous for a rare form of dwarfism. Among the amish, that rare mutation is found in higher frequencies than normal. You have a population with some allele frequency and some catastrophic event occurs that wipes out most of the population, leaving only a few individuals. The individuals who survive the catastrophe are a non-random sample of the original population. Because this is a huge catastrophic event, the phenotype don"t survive because of their phenotypes. Selection can act against drift effects, especially in big populations.

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