Biology 1001A Lecture Notes - Myotonic Dystrophy, Conservation Biology, Stabilizing Selection

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Populations allele frequencies change over time and do match the hardy-weinberg prediction. There are several processes that foster microevolution; mutation, gene flow, genetic drift, natural selection and non-random mating. Change in allele frequencies as individuals join a population and reproduce. Random changes in allele frequencies caused by chance events. Differential survivorship or reproduction of individuals with different genotypes. Choice of mates based on their phenotypes and genotypes. Reduces genetic variation, especially in small populations; can eliminate alleles. One allele may increase frequency or allelic variation can be preserved. Does not directly affect allele frequencies, but usually prevents genetic equilibrium. Only variation in the germ lines is heritable: except plants where nonreproductive structures may pass on a mutation that can eventually change the gene pool. Example: in the construction of a polypeptide chain an amino acid can be specified by different codons: as a result, some dna sequence changes do not alter the amino acid sequence.

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