BIOLOGY 152 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Allele Frequency, Genetic Drift, Zygosity

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20 Sep 2015
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In the example above, you can see that the allele frequency does not remain completely consistent from generation to generation. Which offspring survive (which gametes, which alleles?) However, there are cases where a woman gets pregnant and only gives birth to one gender every single time (or most of the time) This is not exactly rare either: consequences of genetic drift, random fluctuations in allele frequency, as population size decreases, At the allelic level, you can have a random loss of certain alleles. At the genotypic level, you can have a loss of heterozygosity (because of fewer alleles to work with) It"s optimal to have heterozygous offspring: examples of inbreeding, livestock: 8,000,000 cows were produced from 37 individuals. Several breeds of cows have disappeared: almost 78 breeds lost each year! Cows likely to develop neurological disorders, autoimmune diseases, and fertility problems: amish communities. An amish community in pennsylvania consists of descendents of only 200 swiss from the 1700"s.

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