BIO 201 Lecture Notes - Lecture 9: Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism, Small Population Size, Genotype Frequency

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Gamete frequencies are proportional to allele frequencies (i. e. the gamete frequencies are the allele frequencies. Random mating: (also: genotype frequencies = in males and females) If mating is random, we can use a punnett square to predict the genotype frequencies from the allele frequencies. In a freely interbreeding, large, sexually reproducing population, the frequency of each allele remains constant. Once at equilibrium, genotype frequencies remain constant. The population remains variable at this locus. As a null model it"s what we expect to find if a bunch of things are not happening. Null models are very useful they give us specific, numerical expectations to test our actual observations against. If our observations do not conform to the h-w expectations. Then one of both things are happening: selection, demographic changes. And in either case: the population is not at equilibrium, it is evolving: remember the population genetic definition of evolution. Non-random mating: could affect single genes or whole genomes.

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