Biology 3466B Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Genetic Drift, Sexual Reproduction, Assortative Mating

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Every time we study a locus, we need to consider the number of alleles. Alleles increase, the number of heterozygotes in hardy-weinberg increases. n(n-1)/2 n=number of alleles. This equation determines the kinds of heterozygotes in numbers. (k-1)/k. The maximum frequency of heterozygotes is 0. 5, but if we have more heterozygote alleles, the frequency of heterozygotes is (k-1)/k. When the frequency of each alleles are equal, there"s the most variation in the population. If there are less frequency of heterozygotes, there are less heterozygous alleles. ne = 1/(1-h). H = the proportion. ne = number of alleles. Hardy-weinberg doesn"t work on asexual organisms, population have to be diploid, no overlapping generations, males and females equal in number, mating has to be random, and population needs to be infinitely large. If the hardy-weinberg can only be find in a population that"s infinitely large -> it can"t be applied to real life. Selection, migration, and mutation cause disruption in the hardy-weinberg principle.

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