Biology 1001A Lecture Notes - Lecture 13: Genotype Frequency, Allele Frequency, Product Rule

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Biology 1001a | 2012 f(a1a1) = p2! f(a1a2) = 2pq!f(a2a2) = q2. Just because an allele is recessive to another allele, this does not automatically decrease the occurrence of the allele, therefore it will not simply die out. Evolution is a change in allele frequencies from one generation to another. In a large, random-mating population, where mutations are rare enough to be ignored, in the absence of immigration or emigration, and if there is no selection To recognize evolution ,we need to know what a non-evolving population looks like. If genotype frequencies can be predicted from allele frequencies, population is in. Allele frequencies will not change while this is true. If not, one or more assumptions of hwe are violated, therefore the population may be evolving. If selection pressure is strong, evolution proceeds more quickly. For each genotype we can estimate (based on lifetime reproductive success, survival) its. By de nition, ttest genotype(s) has w = 1.

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