BIOL 2905 Chapter Notes - Chapter 6.3: Gamete, Mutagen, Stabilizing Selection

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Directional selection: a pattern of natural selection that favors one extreme phenotype with the result that the average phenotype of a population changes in one direction. Can lead to fixation of advantageous alleles and loss of deleterious alleles. It tends to reduce generic variation within a population. Individuals at one end of phenotypic variation will have higher fitness. Stabilizing selection: a pattern of natural selection that favors phenotypes near the middle of the range of phenotypic variation. Reduces overall genetic variation in a population and there is no average value of a trait over time. Disruptive selection: a pattern of natural selection that favors extreme phenotypes at both ends of the range of phenotypic variation. Balancing selection: a pattern of natural selection in which no single allele is favored in all populations of a species at all times. Instead, there is a balance among alleles in terms of fitness and frequency. It doesn"t favour random alleles, it favours favoured alleles!

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