BIOL 150 Lecture Notes - Lecture 17: Genetic Drift, Panmixia, Gene Flow

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A difference in mating rate that can result from females choosing certain male characteristics, or can result from competition (i. e. non-random mating. But both feature an ability to pass on genes to next generation. Directional selection- favors one phenotype, causing the average phenotype in the population to change in one direction. Darwin recognized this as a mechanism of evolution. Pattern: traits that attract members of the opposite sex are much more highly elaborate in males. Process: energetic cost of making an egg is huge but cost of making sperm is cheap. In most species, females invest more energy in offspring than males. However: sometimes females don"t have the opportunity to choose competition among males is main source of sexual selection. Males tend to have more traits that function only in courtship or male-male competition (horns/antlers; coloration; size ) Any change in allele frequency in a population due to chance (or luck )

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