Biology 1201A Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Assortative Mating, Allele Frequency, Gene Flow

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"forces" that do not keep populations in hwe. Any movement of individuals (or genetic material) from one population to another. B allele is added to the green population. B allele is lost from the brown population. Adds new alleles, genetic variation within a population. Change in allele frequencies due to the effect of chance. By chance some individuals may not reproduce. Or by chance only a small subset of individuals reproduce. Due to sampling (catastrophic event) a very small number, change in allele frequency by chance. A small number of individuals start a new population, change in allele frequency by chance. Reduced capacity to cope with environmental change. E. g. , cheetahs - poor sperm, palate erosion, kinked tail. Disrupts hwe, but does not cause evolution on it"s own, genotype frequencies change, but not allele frequencies. Individuals select mates based on phenotype: assortive mating. Promotes inbreeding and homozygosity: disassortative mating. Inbreeding - assortative mating between closely related individuals.

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