PCB 4674C Lecture Notes - Lecture 28: Sewall Wright, Genotype Frequency, Population Genetics

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31 Dec 2019
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Introduction: a simple question we might ask is: What forces affect the frequencies of alleles in populations: another way to ask this is from a predictive perspective. If we know the genotype or allele frequencies in one generation, can we predict what they will be in the next generation: this perspective views evolution as a change in allele frequencies in populations. So, in the population genetics approach, evolution is viewed as change in the genetic composition of populations: this approach is uniformitarian and extrapolationist. The assumption is that we can extrapolate from microevolutionary processes (described by simple mathematical models) to long-term macroevolutionary trends: as we have seen, the relevance of microevolution to macroevolution is still a subject of some debate. Some view macroevolution as simply microevolution happening for a long time, whole some think that fundamentally different processes may be taking place in some macroevolutionary patterns.

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