BIOL 1001 Lecture Notes - Lecture 12: Assortative Mating, Directional Selection, Genotype Frequency

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26 Feb 2017
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All 40 individuals in population 1 have a1a1. Both populations initially had both a1 and a2. The populations are located far away from one another and environmental conditions are similar. If there are four different alleles and they could all have arginine but they may all have different sequences: however they will either remain fixed (1 is 100% while 3 are lost) or loss. All populations are susceptible to drift but smaller have a bigger impact. Allele frequencies change just through chance because not through selection (favored), mutation and population moving into environment (flow) Drift is random but it drives frequencies to change. If you have populations that are small (endangered species), not only do you have selection driving out variation but drift is also doing the same therefore resulting in decreased variation / increase of homozygous: ex. Genetic equilibrium the relationship between allele and genotype frequencies in populations that are not evolving.

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