BIOEE 1780 Chapter Notes - Chapter 6: Genetic Variation, Allele Frequency, Genetic Drift

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In small populations, alleles may become more or less common from one generation to the next through a similar random process, known as genetic drift. Fixed allele: an allele that remains in a population when all of the alternative alleles have disappeared; when all members of a population now carry a particular allele. In computer simulations, the smaller the population, the more dramatically the allele frequency fluctuated, and the sooner the allele became fixed or lost. Genetic drift eliminates alleles faster in small populations than in bigger ones. Even in large populations genetic drift will eventually eliminate alleles robs populations of their genetic variation. Genetic drift is the random, nonrepresentative sampling of alleles from a population during breeding. It is a mechanism of evolution because it causes the allelic composition of a population to change from generation to generation. Alleles are lost due to genetic drift much more rapidly in small populations than in large populations.

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