BIOL 373 Lecture Notes - Lecture 14: Quantitative Genetics, Total Variation, Phenotypic Trait

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Measuring heritable variation: basic tenets of darwin"s theory of evolution by natural selection: The first step in a quantitative genetic analysis is to determine the extent to which the trait in question is heritable. Heritability = vg/ vp = vg/ (vg + ve) If the variation among individuals is due to variation in their genes, then offspring will resemble their parents. [9. 13c] if offspring strongly resemble their parents, the slope of the best-fit line will be near 1; this is evidence that variation among individuals in the population is due to variation in their genes, not variation in their environments. If heritability is high, and variation among individuals is due mostly to variation in genes, then monozygotic twins will be more similar to each other than are dizygotic twins. If heritability is low, and variation among individuals is due mostly to variation in environments, then monozygotic twins will be as different from each other as dizygotic twins.

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