MBG 1000 Chapter Notes - Chapter 14: Allele Frequency, Genotype Frequency, Genetic Drift

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Population genetics is the study of allele frequencies in groups of organisms of the same species in the same geographic area. The genes in a population comprise its gene pool. Microevolution reflects changes in allele frequencies in populations. It is not occurring if allele frequencies stay constant over generations (hardy-weinberg equilibrium) Five factors can change genotype frequencies: non-random mating, migration, genetic drift, mutation, and natural selection. The frequency of the recessive allele equals the proportion of homozygous recessive plus one hale that of carriers, and the frequency of the dominant allele equals the proportion of homozygous dominants plus one half that of carriers. In hardy-weinberg equilibrium, allele frequencies remain constant from one generation to the next. Allele frequencies in populations can be inferred from the frequency of homozygous recessive individuals (q2). The values of q and p can then be deduced and the hardy. Weinberg equation applied to predict the frequency of carriers.

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