BIO 2137 Chapter Notes - Chapter 11: Allele Frequency, Genetic Drift, Selective Breeding

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There must be a struggle for existence, in which favourable variations tend to survive. Natural selection: the process by which surviving progeny are chosen. Artificial selection: the process by which breeders of domesticated plants and animals deliberately change the characteristics of the strains or races in which they are interested. Gene pool: the sum total of all the alleles of all the genes of all the individuals in a population. The behaviour of genes in populations: the hardy-weinberg law. The hardy-weinberg equation provides a standard against which we can measure the changes in allele frequencies that are always occurring in natural populations. Small-scale generation-to-generation change in the frequency of a populations alleles is referred to as microevolution. Four things that can change a populations gene pool: mutations, gene flow, genetic drift, non-random mating. Mutations provide the raw material for evolutionary change. Gene flow decreased the differences between populations, therefore counteracting natural selection.

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