BIOA01H3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Stabilizing Selection, Disruptive Selection, Mate Choice

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31 Oct 2016
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BIOA01H3 Full Course Notes
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Fitness lifetime reproductive success of an organism. Adaptations traits that increase the fitness of organisms relative to others without that trait. Wild type the most common form of a gene in the nature. Fixed allele an allele that is present at a frequency of 100% in a population (there are no other alleles for that gene in the population) Fixation the process by which an allele increases in frequency until it is present at 100% in a population. The ultimate source of all heritable variation. Rare at any one location in the genome but. Mutations may accumulate over long time scales. Ex. humans (homo sapiens) have 23 pairs of chromosomes, hundreds-thousands of gene on each chromosome, and about 3 billion base-pairs across the genome. Most common: point mutations (change in a single base-pair) Causes: natural errors in dna replication, exposure to mutagens (mutagenic chemicals or radiation) Ex. point mutation in mlph gene affects melanin transport across taxa (mice, chicken, humans)

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