BISC 1116 Chapter Notes - Chapter 23: Gene Duplication, Allele Frequency, Genetic Variation

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Individuals in a population vary in their phenotypic traits. Ex: in humans phenotypic variations are evident in facial features, height etc. Genetic variation can also be seen in dna, but little of this variation results in phenotypic variation. And, some phenotypic variation does not result from genetic differences among individuals. Phenotype is the product of an inherited genotype and environmental influences. Ex: a human bodybuilder alters their genotype dramatically but does not pass muscles onto offspring. So only the genetic part of phenotype can have evolutionary consequences. Genetic variation occurs when mutation, gene-duplication, or other processes produce new alleles and new genes. New alleles can arise by mutation a change in the nucleotide sequence of an organism"s dna. Because organisms have evolved over time to become best suited to their environment, mutation can be harmful. When it is, natural selection removes such harmful alleles. But, in diploid organisms recessive alleles can just be hidden.

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