theme 4b- population genetics Flashcards
what is a population?
interbreeding group of individuals that belong to the same species and live within a restricted geographical area
what is the null hypothesis for evolution?
there will be no change in allele frequencies over time
what were the 5 assumptions of hardy and weinburgs population?
- no mutations, no new alleles
- no gene flow from other populations
- the population is very big
4.natural selection doesn’t affect the alleles - random mating
what happens to the allele frequencies if the H+W assumptions are correct?
allele frequencies are constant between generations
what is random mating?
gametes unit randomly
what is the probability theory?
probability of two independant events occuring together is the product of their individual probabilities (event 1* event 2= probaility)
what is the HW equilibrium equation?
p^2+2pq+q^2=1
what can you do to return a population to HW equilibrium?
one round of random mating with the other conditions met (no evolution or migration and a big population) will return the population to equilibrium
what is hardy weinburg the null hypothesis for?
change in allele frequency
why is HWE a powerful test in evolution?
-tells us when evolution is not occuring
-Departure from equilibrium suggests that one or more of the assumptions has been violated
-predicts allele frequency when we don’t have other information
how to test if a population is in HWE?
- Calculate allele frequencies, p and q
- Use allele frequencies to calculate expected genotype frequencies: p2 , 2pq , q2
- Calculate expected numbers under HWE
- Compare observed to expected (Chi-square test)