Theme 4B Flashcards
What is a population?
Interbreeding group of individuals that belong to the same species and live within a restricted geographical area
What are population genetics?
Consequences of Mendelian Genetics in a population - shift from Individual- to Population- Level Thinking
What is the null hypothesis for evolution?
If evolution is changes in allele frequencies over time, then null hypothesis should be no change in allele frequencies over time
Genetic Diversity in the Absence of Evolution Model
- A single locus with two alleles does not change state b/w generations, i.e., no mutation
- Alleles are not added to the population: No gene flow from other populations
- The population is very big (infinite in theory) -> eliminates the effect of random processes that could change allele frequencies
- Natural selection does not affect the alleles considered, regardless of their genotype at the locus of
interest, all diploid individuals have the
same fitness - Random mating: all diploid individuals have the
same fitness
What is Genetic Drift?
Allele frequencies can change by chance alone given the number of matings that can occur when you have a low number of individuals compared to a large number of individuals
Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium
Population allele frequencies do not change if:
- There is no mutation
- There is no migration (gene flow)
- Population is infinitely large
- Genotypes do not differ in fitness (no selection)
- Mating is random
Genotypes and Frequencies According to HWE
AA = p^2 Aa = 2pq aa = q^2
Because the gametes are haploid, and mix RANDOMLY:
if there is no selection at the genotype level, all gametes go back into gene pool
Even if a population is not in HWE, one round of random mating with the other conditions met will:
Return the population to equilibrium
Why is HWE a powerful test in evolution?
- HWE tells us when Evolution is NOT occurring – null model or hypothesis in evolution
- Departure from equilibrium suggests that one or more of the assumptions has been violated (i.e., evolution)
- Use HWE to predict genotype frequencies when we have less information about a population
In general, in a sample of n individuals, the frequency of an allele is:
The number of occurrences of the allele divided by twice the number of individuals in the sample (2n).