BIOL208 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Meiosis, Directional Selection, Zygosity

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Natural selection acts on individuals, but only populations evolve (via natural selection) Population: a group of individuals of the same species that live in the same area and interbreed, producing fertile offspring. A population is the smallest unit of evolutionary change. Microevolution: is a change in allele frequencies in populations over generations. Gene: (or genetic locus) is the combination of two alleles (in diploid individuals) Alleles: are different forms of a gene, corresponding to different dna sequences in each different form. There is one allele per chromosome and in sexually reproducing species, the child receives one chromosome from each parent. Each allele remains separate (do not blend; apparent blending results in incomplete dominance) Microevolution is a change in allele frequencies in populations over generations. A population is a localized group of individuals of a single species that interbreed, and therefor share alleles, and produce fertile offspring.

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