BIOL 201 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Allele Frequency, Random Effects Model, Genetic Drift

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Frequency of a recessive allele will be more widely present as compared to the dominant allele -> reason being with homo-heterozygotes. Example: cystic fibrosis: see example in lecture 5. No migration: when you measure the frequency at a particular locus assumption made is that its from same population. Wahlund effect (not in textbook) -> you have a locus with 2 alleles and 2 populations contributing to sample -> blended distribution of both population samples. Observed = pop1 + pop 2 / 2. There will always be fewer heterozygotes and more homozygotes. If there is significant migration, we observe more homozygotes than expected by hardy weinberg - > this will always occur. This is an indication that you are sampling 2 populations, which is why there is a ton of migration occurring. Progressive introductions have been accompanied by loss of diversity.

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