BIOL 031 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Frequency-Dependent Selection, Heterozygote Advantage, Stabilizing Selection

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Natural selection differential survival and reproduction of individuals due to differences in phenotype. After selection, the population retains a subset of pre-existing genetic variation. Leads to adaptation (better match between phenotype and environment) Influences which members of a population live and reproduce within a generation. As the environment changes over time, so do selection presumes and effect: modes of natural selection, directional selection change in average value toward extreme phenotype. Often leads to reduced variation in population. *depends on whether size is dictated by genes or chance: stabilizing selection a. k. a. The mean value of a trait doesn"t change, the outliers do. Often a sign of fitness trade off. *as long as conditions will be stable, there will be stabilizing selection: disruptive selection there is selection against intermediate trait values, causing trait values to become bimodal. May lead to formation of new species. *mean stays the same: balancing selection selection for the maintenance of multiple alleles in a population.

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