BIOLOGY 280 Study Guide - Midterm Guide: Inbreeding Depression, Gene Flow, Population Bottleneck

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16 Nov 2020
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An equilibrium (non-evolving) population is an imaginary concept in which no evolution occurs in a population. The allele frequencies, and therefore genotypic frequencies, will remain unchanged overtime, despite sexual recombination. This will never occur in the real world because in the real world, all populations evolve. However, this concept can be helpful because we want to precisely look at each of the mechanisms that cause evolution. This null condition where no evolution occurs, and we can manipulate it factor by factor to show evolution by specific causes. The conditions required for a population to remain at evolutionary equilibrium includes no mutations, random mating, infinite size (the larger the population, the better), no migration, and no selection. Once these conditions are all met, the population will not evolve. This concept is important because we want to be able to isolate each of the conditions and predict each evolutionary change.

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