Title: Hardy-Weinberg Genetic Equilibrium
1Hardy-Weinberg Genetic Equilibrium
Flamingo population
2Remember to maintain equilibrium
- No change due to mutations.
- Individuals do not move in or out of the
population. - The population is and remains large.
- Random mating.
- No selection
Tule Elk population at Pt Reyes
3Disruption of Genetic Equilibrium
- If any of the 5 factors occur, they can cause the
gene frequency to change in a population. - If the gene frequencies change evolution has
occurred.
Tule Elk population at Pt. Reyes
4Mutations
- Mutations occur normally but at extremely low
rates. - Mutations do not cause gene frequencies to
change.
5Migration
- Immigration (movement in) or emigration (movement
out) can effect gene frequencies. - Movement of individuals from one population to
another results in gene flow.
6Genetic Drift
- Small populations are subject to genetic drift.
- Random events lead to changes in gene frequencies.
Each line represents a different population. Each
starts with the same number of allele A. over
time the number of individuals with that allele
changes. If a population is small enough over
several generation the allele will either be 0 or
100 present.
7Nonrandom Mating
- Random mating throughout a population does not
occur. - Geographical regions.
- Sexual selection
- Ex birds of paradise
- Assortive mating
- Ex Fruit flies.
8Directional Selection
- Wild pigs impose selection upon the cactus
population. - Cactus that have fewer needles do not survive to
reproduce. - Cactus with more needles survive to reproduce.
Cactus and wild pigs
9Directional Selection results
- Result of directional selection is a shift in the
population towards more spines. - One extreme is selected for and one against.
- Ex cliff swallows after a cold snap.
Ive posted a short article on how cliff swallow
wing length has shorted due to new selective
pressures. Read it and refer to it in your
summary.
10Stabilizing Selection
- Both extremes are selected against.
- The average is selected for.
- Population becomes more similar due to average
being selected for. - Ex human birth weight
11Disruptive Selection
- Extremes are selected for.
- Results in two distinctly different populations.
- Disruptive selection can lead to two species.
- Average is selected against.
- Ex finches in west Africa, eat different sized
seeds.
12Calculating allele frequencies
- Use the Hardy-Weinberg equation
- p²  2pq  q²  1
- q is the recessive trait and q² is homozygous
recessive - p is the dominate trait and p² is homozygous
dominant. - pq is heterozygous
- added together you have 100 of the individuals
in a population
13Disruption of Genetic Equilibrium - Summary of
Selection
14Summary Review
- Describe the 3 types of selection.
- What is genetic drift, what causes it, an what
results from it? - What can cause new genes to enter a population?
- What do these two pictures illustrate?