Selection and Genetic Drift Flashcards

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0
Q

What is directional selection?

A
  • if the selection pressure favours those who possess a particular allele, those individuals are placed at a selective advantage
  • they will reproduce more frequently and a higher proportion of the next generation will possess that allele
  • there is a change in the frequency of alleles
  • it is an evolutionary force
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1
Q

What is stabilising selection?

A
  • no evolutionary change
  • this is because any change away from the well-adapted form is unlikely to be successful and will not pass on more alleles to the next generation
  • the alleles that produce these extremes are not likely to increase their proportional share of the gene pool
  • there is no change in allele frequency
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2
Q

What effect does genetic drift have on small populations?

A
  • the smaller a population the higher the chance that there will be random changes in allele frequency (genetic drift)
  • can result in alleles being lost so reduces genetic variation
  • may reduce the ability of a population being able to survive in a new environment so could lead to extinction of a species or the production of a new one
  • greater effect on population if there has been a population bottleneck (large population suddenly becomes smaller due to a natural disaster)
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