Genotypic Frequency
Mendelian Population
Allelic Frequency
Genetic Rescue
Gene Pool
Hardy-Weinberg Law
– Principle of population genetics stating that if a population is large, randomly mating, and not affected by mutation, migration, or natural selection, then allelic frequencies of a population do not change and the genotypic frequencies stabilize after one generation in the proportions p2 (the frequency of AA), 2pq (the frequency of Aa), and q2 (the frequency of aa), where p equals the frequency of allele A and q equals the frequency of allele a.
Hardy-Weinberg Equation
p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1
Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium
Degrees of freedom for a chi-square test of Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium
The number of genotypes – the number of alleles
Inbreeding
- A form of non-random mating; preferential mating between related individuals.
Inbreeding Depression
Non Random Mating
Sampling Error
Genetic Drift
Migration
Mutation As An Evolutionary Force
-Creates new genetic variation in a gene pool.
Founder Effect
Effective Population Size
Genetic Bottleneck
Selection Coefficient
Directional Selection
Overdominance
Fitness
Natural Selection