BIOB51H3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 14: Eurasian Wolf, Genotype Frequency, Assortative Mating

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Amish: it is still at a high frequency because it is maintained at low frequencies for many generations. Absolutely random mechanism of evolution: doesn"t lead to adaptation, but can change allele frequencies, leads to random fixation of alleles, most powerful in small populations, most powerful in absence of selection. It occurs when there is a pairing between the phenotypes of two individuals: there are no alleles gained or lost, thus there is no evolutionary change. It is not the same as sexual selection: everyone mates, just not randomly, there are two types of non-random mating, assortative: which is like mates with like", disassortative: which is like mates with unlike". In the shoe example, when non-random mating occurs, assortative matching will occur: only choose matched pairs, there is a lot of heterozygosity, because like is mating with like. Non-random mating: is when all pairings of gametes are not equally likely: effects, doesn"t change allele frequencies.

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