BIOL 102 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Allele Frequency, Genetic Drift, Mutation Rate

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6 Feb 2017
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Allele frequencies can change from one generation to the next purely as a result of chance, this called genetic drift. Drift has more dramatic effects in a smaller population than in a larger one. The founder effect is a type of genetic drift that occurs when a small group of founders leaves a population and establishes a new one. If by chance, alleles from the original population are absent from the founders, they will also be absent from the new populations. Genetic bottlenecks occur when a population loses a large proportion of its members. If the original population is large, the reduced population is likely to retain the same alleles present in the original population. But in a small starting population, bottlenecks are more consequential; the loss of individuals is more likely to result in the loss of alleles from the population. How often does a black coat mutation arise: depends on.

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