BIO 281 Lecture Notes - Lecture 11: Northern Elephant Seal, Population Bottleneck, Allele Frequency

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18 Nov 2015
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Random processes involved in mating can change allele frequencies. New population likely to have different allele frequencies than source population, by chance. Results when most individuals in a large population die. Due to earthquakes, floods, fire, drought, human activity. Small group of individuals left likely to have different allele frequencies than original population, by chance. Ex: northern elephant seal: human hunting reduced population size to 30 in 18090s (genetic diversity decreased because decrease in population size) Ex: cheetah populations have very low genetic diversity-- suggests population bottleneck in the past. Migration of individuals or gametes (and their alleles) to or from a population. Gene flow (migration) between populations mixes alleles up and keeps populations similar. Gene flow: makes populations more similar to each other. Not good: can inhibit adaptation in edge populations experiencing different selection pressures. Higher gene flow from mainland to western population introduces maladaptive alleles.

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