PCB 4674 Chapter Notes - Chapter 6: Effective Population Size, Zygosity, Sewall Wright

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Mendelian genetics in populations ii: migration, drift, and nonrandom mating. Random fixation of alleles: as any allele changes frequency, it will eventually hit one boundary or the other. Frequency of 0- the allele is lost forever. Loss of heterozygosity: as allele frequencies drift towards fixation or loss, the frequency of heterozygotes declines, heterozygosity: frequency of heterozygotes in a population. Hg+1 is the heterozygosity in the next generation. Hg is the heterozygosity in this generation. N is the number of individuals in a population: fst- fixation index. Ht is expected heterozygosity according to hw. Hs is the average across separate populations. An experiment on random fixation and loss of heterozygosity: fruit flies. More rapidly than expected: because the effective population size was smaller than the actual population size (some may have died before reproducing, or some males may have been rejected as mates, etc. ) Random fixation and loss of heterozygosity in natural populations: ozark lizards.

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