BIO 311D Lecture Notes - Lecture 25: Genetic Drift, Sampling Error, Population Genetics

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Bio 311d, dr. donald levin, lecture #25, 29 march 2017 (all images are taken from dr. levin"s lecture slides, which are available on his website http://www. sbs. utexas. edu/levin/bio311d/) Random events in population genetics: random fluctuations in gene frequency, similar to a bowling ball with obstacles in the alley. According to the equation p + q = 1, if one allele = 1, then the other allele will be 0. Genetic drift: random change in gene frequencies from one generation to another, higher population size leads to less genetic drift/narrower range. Random genetic drift: if everyone is heterozygous, the allele frequency would be 0. 5, with each generation, distribution becomes more spaced out and even. Bottleneck effects: a dramatic reduction in population size that leads to reduced genetic variability. Founder"s effect: chance deviation in new founder populations from the source, involves sampling error and smaller populations, deviates by chance, example: moving from europe to the americas.

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