Utilisateur
The branch of genetics that studies the genetic makeup of groups (populations) and how this changes over time due to evolutionary forces.
A group of interbreeding sexually reproducing individuals that share a common gene pool.
Because heritable variation in traits allows natural selection to act — individuals with advantageous traits survive and reproduce more, passing those traits to the next generation.
Darwin’s finches: ancestral finch populations had variation in beak size and shape, which allowed some birds to survive better under changing food sources (e.g., seeds vs. insects).
It provides the raw material for evolution — populations with more variation are better able to adapt to environmental changes.
Because they are a group of interbreeding, sexually reproducing individuals that share a common gene pool, allowing for the study of population-level genetics.
In 1949, a single breeding pair of wolves crossed frozen Lake Superior.
By 1959, there were 20 wolves.
By 1980, the population grew to 50 wolves.
Genotypic frequencies (how often each genotype occurs)
Allelic frequencies (how often each allele occurs)
f(AA)= number of AA individuals/ N
f(Aa)= number of Aa individuals/N
f(aa)= number of aa individuals/ N
✅ These should always add up to 1 (or 100%)
Because genotypes are combinations of alleles — different arrangements of a smaller number of alleles create more genotypic possibilities.
A. By counting the number of alleles directly (e.g., from individual genotypes)
B. By using the frequencies of genotypes
✅ Both methods should give the same result, and allele frequencies always add up to 1.
frequency of an allele = number of copies of that allele (N)/ number of copies of alleles at the locus (2N)
or
p= 2NAA + nAa/ 2N
q= 2naa + nAa/ 2N
p+q =1
p= f(A) = f(AA) + 1/2f(Aa)
q= f(a)= f(aa)+ 1/2f(Aa)
p+q =1
genotype freq:
p= f(A1) = f(A1A1) + 1/2f(A1A2) + 1/2f(A1A3)
fist term is the homo, 2nd and 3rd terms are the hetero
repeat for A2 and A3
genotype allele (similar):
p, q,r
p= f(A1)= ( 2nA1A1 + n(A1A2) + n(A1A3) )/ 2N
Because females have 2 X chromosomes and males only have 1, so you must calculate separately by sex.
f(X1)= (2nx1x1 + nx1x2 + nx1y)/ 2nfemales + nmales
same for X2
Males contribute 1 X; females contribute 2 Xs.
f(x1) = f(x1x1) + 1/2f(x1x2) + f(x1y)
same for x2
Males are hemizygous, so their alleles are fully counted (not halved).
It shows how allele and genotype frequencies remain constant from one generation to the next in an ideal population.
Large population
Random mating
No mutation
No migration
No natural selection
f(AA) = p2
f(Aa) = 2pq
f(aa) = q2
where:
p= f(A), q= f(a), and p + q =1
✅ After one generation of random mating, the population reaches Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.
G.H. Hardy and Wilhelm Weinberg independently formulated the law in 1908.
It's a mathematical model that evaluates the effect of reproduction on allelic and genotypic frequencies in a population under ideal conditions (no evolution occurring).
Allelic frequencies remain constant from generation to generation — no evolution occurs.
Genotypic frequencies stabilize after just one generation of random mating, and will not change in future generations if conditions remain ideal.
If the assumptions are met, then reproduction alone does not change allelic or genotypic frequencies in a population.
They will stabilize and reach the Hardy-Weinberg proportions:
𝑝2 = frequency of AA
2𝑝𝑞 = frequency of Aa
𝑞2= frequency of aa
The genotype frequencies match the predicted values of
p2 + 2pq + q2=1, and there is no evolution occurring at that locus.
Yes — the allelic frequencies in individuals equal the frequencies in gametes.
🧠 Why? Mendelian inheritance ensures each allele is passed to 50% of gametes on average.
Sperm allele frequencies: p and q
Egg allele frequencies: p and q
Use multiplication:
-
𝑝2= AA
2pq = Aa
𝑞2= aa
That the population is not evolving, because allele frequencies remain constant. evolution results from changes to allelic
frequencies.
No — without mutation, selection, or migration, reproduction does not change allele frequencies.
If p = q = 0.5 → Aa (heterozygote) is most frequent
If one allele is more common → the corresponding homozygote becomes most frequent
In a population in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, the
genotypic frequencies are determined by allelic frequencies
It indicates that one or more assumptions have been violated, which may suggest evolution is occurring.
The TAS2R38 gene — it has two common alleles:
Taster allele (dominant)- bitter
Non-taster allele (recessive)
Specific SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms) cause amino acid changes in the taste receptor, altering sensitivity to bitterness.
No, these taste receptor alleles are in Hardy Weinberg Equilibrium!
PTC (phenylthiocarbamide) is a non-toxic chemical that is not naturally found in the environment, so there is no current selective pressure favoring tasters or non-tasters.
Because it’s a simple, well-understood example of:
Mendelian inheritance
Allelic variation in human populations
A model for how traits might be affected by natural selection if a similar compound were present in nature
100% of Indigenous Americans are tasters
~50% of Aboriginal Australians are tasters
Women, Asians, and African-Americans are more likely to be “super-tasters”
No — it affects genotypic frequencies, not allelic frequencies.
When individuals prefer mates with similar traits (e.g., tall × tall).
When individuals prefer dissimilar traits (e.g., tall × short).
A form of positive assortative mating where individuals mate with close relatives.
preferential
mating between unrelated
individuals
It increases homozygosity and decreases heterozygosity, raising the risk of recessive disorders. This is harmful because the increase in homozygotes boosts the probability that deleterious and lethal recessive alleles will combine to produce a harmful trait.
Mutation
Migration (gene flow)
Genetic drift
Natural selection
They introduce new alleles, shifting p and q over time.
Forward mutation: allele A → a
Reverse mutation: a → A
Eventually reach a mutation equilibrium
mutations
Migration introduces alleles from outside populations, altering the gene pool (gene flow).
Random fluctuations in allele frequencies due to small population size, like flipping a coin only a few times.
It causes sampling error.
deviation from an expected
ratio due to limited sample size
That an individual will produce gametes with each of their two alleles in equal proportion — about 50:50.
Because this 50:50 ratio is only accurate when many gametes are produced — in small populations, random chance can cause deviations.
Genetic drift — a random change in allele frequencies due to sampling error, especially in small populations.
differential reproduction of certain
genotypes. A process where individuals with advantageous (adaptive) traits reproduce more, increasing the frequency of adaptive alleles.
It is the only force that promotes adaptation to the environment.
For example polar bears have adapted to live in extreme Arctic
environments
.457, .432, .111
M= .673, N=.327
f(tt) = q2 = 34/97 = 0.3505
q = 0.592 = allele frequency for t in BIOL 207 population!
Because p + q = 1
p = 1 - q
p = 0.408
f(TT) = p2 = 0.1665
f(Tt) = 2pq = 0.4831
f(tt) = q2 = 0.3505
Meaning:
• Approximately 16/97 people are expected to be TT “super tasters” – if the filter paper was intensely/strongly bitter, you are
probably a ”super taster”!
• Approximately 47/97 people are expected to be Tt