BSCI 1511 Chapter Notes - Chapter 23: Frequency-Dependent Selection, Balancing Selection, Hemoglobin

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Evolution is the change in population of organisms over time. Microevolution: a change in allele frequencies in a population over generations. Genetic drift: chance vents that alter allele frequencies. Gene flow: transfer of alleles between populations. Genetic variation: differences among individuals in the composition of their genes or other dna sequences. Gene variability: average percentage of loci that are heterozygous. Nucleotide variability is high but doesn"t change much since the variation is typically in the introns and not the exons. Variation can also occur to environment change. Can occur by mutation (a change in nucleotide sequence of an organism"s. Heterozygote protection masks recessive alleles that could be potentially helpful if the situation changes. Sometimes this results in neutral variation, differences in sequences that do not confer a selective advantage or disadvantage: altering gene number or position. Duplication of genes due to errors in meiosis, slippage during dna replication, or activities of transposable elements.

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