Population genetics; the Hardy-Weinberg principle

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A-Levels Biology 4 (Variation and Evolution) Mind Map on Population genetics; the Hardy-Weinberg principle, created by harry_bygraves on 04/06/2013.
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Mind Map by harry_bygraves, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by harry_bygraves over 11 years ago
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Population genetics; the Hardy-Weinberg principle
  1. Gene pool; is the sum of all the alleles in a population. The members of each population, therefore have the same gene pool.
    1. Allele frequency; refers to the population or percentage of a particular allele of a gene in a population, relative to other alleles of the same gene.
      1. The Hardy-Weinberg equation; is an equation to calculate allele and genotype frequencies within a population
        1. p = represents the frequency of the dominant allele, q = represents the frequency of the recessive allele, p + q =1.0
          1. However in diploid organisms alleles occur in pairs. In order to calculate genotype frequency rather than allele frequency, a second equation is used; p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1.0
            1. where; p2 = frequency of the AA genotype, 2pq = frequency of the Aa genotype, q2 = frequency of aa genotype
            2. The Hardy-Weinberg priciple; the frequency of dominant and recessive alleles in a popuation will remain constant from generation to generation provided certain conditions are met, these are;
              1. 1. The population is large
                1. 2. Mating is random
                  1. 3. No mutations occur
                    1. 4. There is no immigration into or emmigration out of the population
                      1. 5. All genotypes are equally fertile so that no natural selection is taking place
              2. The name given to a change in allele frequency due to change is called genetic drift
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