BIO1011 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Mendelian Inheritance, Allele Frequency, Genotype Frequency

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BIO1011
Lecture 12: Population and Evolutionary Genetics
Definitions
Allele frequency: The proportion (%) of a particular
allele (variant of a gene) among all allele copies
being considered
Balancing selection: Natural selection that
maintains two or more phenotypic forms in a
population
Bottleneck effect: Genetic drift that occurs when
the size of a population is reduced, as by a natural
disaster or human actions
Darwinian fitness: The genetic contribution of an
individual to the next generation's gene pool
relative to the average for the population, usually
measured by the number of offspring or close kin
that survive to reproductive age
Founder effect: Genetic drift that occurs when a
few individuals become isolated from a larger
population and form a new population whose gene
pool composition is not reflective of that of the
original population
Gene pool: The aggregate of all copies of every
type of allele at all loci in every individual in a
population
Genetic drift: A process in which chance events
cause unpredictable fluctuations in allele
frequencies from one generation to the next (often
in small populations)
Genotype frequency: The frequency or proportion
(i.e., 0 < f < 1) of genotypes in a population
Heterozygote advantage: Greater reproductive
success of heterozygous individuals compared
with homozygotes (tends to preserve variation in a
gene pool)
Natural selection: A process in which individuals
that have certain inherited traits tend to survive
and reproduce at higher rates than other
individuals because of those traits
Polymorphism: A discontinuous genetic variation
resulting in the occurrence of several different
forms or types of individuals among the members
of a single species
Random mating: A population mating system in
which every female gamete has an equal
opportunity to be fertilized by every male gamete.
Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium: states that allele and
genotype frequencies in a population will remain
constant from generation to generation in the
absence of other evolutionary influences.
Concept 23.1
- Individuals variations often reflect genetic variation, differences among individuals in the
composition of their genes
Variation within a population
- Characters that vary within a population may be discrete or quantitative
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Document Summary

Genotype frequency: the frequency or proportion (i. e. , 0 < f < 1) of genotypes in a population. Heterozygote advantage: greater reproductive success of heterozygous individuals compared with homozygotes (tends to preserve variation in a gene pool) Natural selection: a process in which individuals that have certain inherited traits tend to survive and reproduce at higher rates than other individuals because of those traits. Polymorphism: a discontinuous genetic variation resulting in the occurrence of several different forms or types of individuals among the members of a single species. Random mating: a population mating system in which every female gamete has an equal opportunity to be fertilized by every male gamete. Hardy-weinberg equilibrium: states that allele and genotype frequencies in a population will remain constant from generation to generation in the absence of other evolutionary influences. Allele frequency: the proportion (%) of a particular allele (variant of a gene) among all allele copies being considered.

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