Biology 1201A Chapter 18: Microevolution, Changes in Population

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22 Nov 2016
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Microevolution: a change in frequencies of alleles or heritable phenotypic variants in a population over time. Population: of organisms includes all the individuals of a single species that live together in the same place and time. Phenotypic variation- differences in appearance or function among individuals of a population" A difference is heritable if it is passed from generation to generation. Quantitative variation- individuals differ in small, incremental ways. Qualitative variation- exist in two or more discrete states, and intermediate forms are often absent. Polymorphism- the existence of discreet variants of a character- such traits are described as polymorphic. Human blood type is an example of a biochemical polymorphism. Phenotypic polymorphisms are described quantitatively by calculating the percentage of frequency of each trait. Phenotypic variation within population bay be caused by: genetic differences between individuals, differences in the environmental factors individuals experience, an interaction between an individuals genetics and the environment.

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