BIOL-104 Lecture Notes - Lecture 19: Genetic Drift, Molecular Clock, Heritability

25 views2 pages
21 Mar 2017
Department
Course
Professor

Document Summary

Rate and base both go into deciding how many mutations we have! And then mutations can be all the way from very bad to very good. There are two species that are identical, then they accumulate mutations that reach fixation and diverge. Only the mutations that go to fixation contribute to divergence. # of gene copies of the population = the probability of fixation of a new mutation in 1 individual. Divergence rate = number of new mutations per generation times the probability that a mutation reaches fixation (frequency=1) within a species (analogous to yield = interest rate x principle $) d = 2nem x 1/(ne) d = m. What we get from this is the molecular clock . The longer something has been split, the more differences in their nucleotide and amino acid code. So the more different they are, the further apart they split. Because ou(cid:396) fossil (cid:396)eco(cid:396)ds a(cid:396)e i(cid:374)sufficie(cid:374)t/(cid:374)ot good, it"s (cid:373)o(cid:396)e accu(cid:396)ate to just se(cid:395)ue(cid:374)ce thei(cid:396)

Get access

Grade+
$40 USD/m
Billed monthly
Grade+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
10 Verified Answers
Class+
$30 USD/m
Billed monthly
Class+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
7 Verified Answers

Related Documents

Related Questions