BIOL 202 Lecture Notes - Lecture 11: Heritability, Environmental Factor, Zygosity

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6 Feb 2017
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Important when studying organisms facing selection (e. g. heat sensitivity) Example: in a 3-flower plants, flower number is controlled by a single gene b. More copies of b2 allele increases flower number (assume no environmental factor) Selecting the parents with most flowers (3 flowers) When the trait is additive dominant, we know that all flowers with 3 flowers must be. Can expect the progeny mean phenotype is also 3 flowers. The difference between means of parental and progeny generation is 1. When the trait is dominant, 3 flower plants can be either b1/b2 or b2/b2. Mixed genotype decreases b2 allele frequency in the 3 flower parent population. Breeding of the 3 flower parents, progeny will have mean phenotype less than 3 flowers. Trait response quick to a certain amount of selection has more (narrow sense) heritability. Selection creates a shift in the mean of phenotype between generations. S-selection differential: mean of selected population minus the mean of original population.

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