Biology 1001A Chapter Notes - Chapter 18.3A: Allele Frequency, Genotype Frequency, Genetic Drift

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3 Feb 2017
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Change in allele frequencies as individuals join a population and reproduce. Random changes in allele frequencies caused by chance events. Differential survivorship or reproduction of individuals with different phenotypes. Choice of mates based on their phenotypes and genotypes. Introduces new genetic variation into population; does not change allele frequencies quickly. Reduces genetic variation, especially in small populations; can eliminate rare alleles. One allele replacing another or allelic variation being preserved. Does not directly affect allele frequencies, but usually prevents genetic equilibrium. A mutation is a spontaneous and heritable change in dna. New mutations are so infrequent that they exert little or no immediate effect on allele frequencies in most population. As mutations accumulate, they can be major sources of heritable variation. For most animals, only mutations in the germ line (the cell line that produces gametes) are heritable. In plants, mutations in meristem cells may be passed to the next generation.

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