BISC 102 Lecture Notes - Lecture 9: Allele Frequency, Meiosis, Microevolution

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One common misconception ( lamarckian ) that organisms evolve in the darwinian sense during their lifetimes. Natural selection acts on individuals but only populations evolve. Microevolution: a change in allele frequencies in a population over generation. The genetic changes are partly the consequences of changes in ecological relationships of individuals that carry those genes in the population (natural selection effects) Four evolutionary mechanism that change allele frequencies in the population: Natural selection: increases frequency of alleles that contribute to reproductive success in a particular environment. Gene flow: migration occurs when individuals leave one population/join. Mutation: modifies allele frequencies in continually introducing new alleles (mostly another/breed non-adaptive but sometimes good) Analyzing change in allele frequencies: to study how the four evolutionary processes affect populations, population biologists take a three-pronged approach: 3) apply knowledge to solve problems: in human genetics, conservation of endangered species and other fields. Gene pool: total number of all alleles of a gene under investigation.

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