CAMPBELL BIOLOGY IN FOCUS-TEXT,AP ED.
3rd Edition
ISBN: 9780136811206
Author: Urry
Publisher: SAVVAS L
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Textbook Question
Chapter 21.3, Problem 2CC
Distinguish genetic drift from gene flow in terms of (a) how they occur and (b) their implications for future
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I believe that the correct answer is:
p^2+2pq+q^2=1
I just want to make sure that I am understanding the Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium correctly.
The use of nucleotide sequence data to measure genetic variabilityis complicated by the fact that the genes of many eukaryotesare complex in organization and contain 5' and 3' flankingregions as well as introns. Researchers have compared thenucleotide sequence of two cloned alleles of the y-globin gene from asingle individual and found a variation of 1 percent. Those differencesinclude 13 substitutions of one nucleotide for anotherand three short DNA segments that have been inserted in oneallele or deleted in the other. None of the changes takes placein the gene’s exons (coding regions). Why do you think this isso, and should it change our concept of genetic variation?
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Chapter 21 Solutions
CAMPBELL BIOLOGY IN FOCUS-TEXT,AP ED.
Ch. 21.1 - Explain why genetic variation within a population...Ch. 21.1 - Of all the mutations that occur in a population,...Ch. 21.1 - Prob. 3CCCh. 21.2 - A population has 700 individuals, 85 of genotype...Ch. 21.2 - The frequency of allele a is 0.45 for a population...Ch. 21.2 - WHAT IF? A locus that affects susceptibility to a...Ch. 21.3 - In what sense is natural selection more...Ch. 21.3 - Distinguish genetic drift from gene flow in terms...Ch. 21.3 - WHAT IF? Suppose two plant populations exchange...Ch. 21.4 - What is the relative fitness of a sterile mule?...
Ch. 21.4 - Explain why natural selection is the only...Ch. 21.4 - Consider a population in which heterozygotes at a...Ch. 21 - Natural selection changes allele frequencies...Ch. 21 - Sparrows With average-sized w1ngs survive severe...Ch. 21 - If the nucleotide variability of a locus equals...Ch. 21 - There are 25 individuals in population 1, all with...Ch. 21 - A fruit fly population has a gene with two...Ch. 21 - FOCUS ON EVOLUTION Using at least TWO examples,...Ch. 21 - Prob. 8TYUCh. 21 - SYNTHESIZE YOUR KNOWLEDGE This kettle lake formed...
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- Please fill in the blank ———- mutations are the most common...arrow_forwardGenetic equilibrium means that ... O the distribution of alleles is not changing from generation to generation The distribution of alleles is changing from generation to generation O the gene pool is not affected by a catastrophic event O the gene pools is not affected by selective agentsarrow_forwardWhat is meant by the term genetic variation? Give two examplesof genetic variation . What causesgenetic variation at the molecular level?arrow_forward
- 1. What is the expected time to fixation in generations for a new mutation in a diploid population (like humans) with an effective population size of 50? This new mutation is neutral and has no impact on fitness (e.g. synonymous polymorphism). Assuming the mutation isn’t lost immediately, will it reach fixation faster in a population of Ne=500 or Ne=5,000 and why?arrow_forwardScientific studies have shown that the majority of human genetic differences worldwide exist within groups (or races) rather than between groups. True or false?arrow_forwardWhat historical, social, religious, cultural, and economic factors promote genetic drift in humans? Can you think of some specific human groups in which genetic drift is likely to have occurred?arrow_forward
- 1. What could be the possible roles of genetic drift in human evolution? Discuss it and show possible evidences for each role. Do not just copy it from somewhere, please.arrow_forwardO Mutation-selection balance Suppose that one allele A₁ mutates to another allele A2 at some rate, μ. Suppose as well that A₁ is dominant over A2 such that A₁A1 and A₁A2 both have the same fitness, but that individuals that are homozygous recessive (A2A2) for the mutant allele A2 are less fit than the dominant genotype by some amount s, the selection coefficient. In this case, A2 mutant alleles come into the population at rate µ, and are removed from the population only when the show up in homozygous genotypes. The gory mathematical proof can be found in Box 7.8, which tells us that: O ■ Example: Suppose A₁ mutates to A2 at rate 0.005, but A₂A2 homozygous recessives are 50% less fit (s = 0.5) than either A₁A1 or A₁A2. What are the expected equilibrial abundances of A₁ and A2? μ = 0.005 S = 0.5 p* = 1-sqrt(µ/s) = 1-sqrt(0.005/0.5) = 0.9 = sqrt(µ/s) = sqrt(0.005/0.5) = 0.1 ● * p = = 1-sqrt(µ/s) q* = sqrt(μ/s) ● Question: Suppose A₁ mutates to A2 at rate 0.01, but A₂A2 homozygous…arrow_forward. In a population of 50,000 diploid individuals, what isthe probability that a new neutral mutation will ultimately reach fixation? What is the probability that itwill ultimately be lost from the population?arrow_forward
- a.) If all the blue dots represent FST values between one species in the Americas and one species in Oceania, does this pattern of genetic similarity on the graph suggest that Native Americans and the people of Oceania followed very different migration routes? Why or why not? b.) Given the maximum possible FST value (based on how this statistic is calculated), is it feasible that all human populations have most of the genetic variation within a given population with very little genetic differentiation between any two populations? Give a reason for your answer. c.) Does the graph above suggest that interbreeding during these human contacts had a considerable effect on the gene pools of the two communities? Or is it more likely that only very limited or no interbreeding took place between islanders of Oceania and Native Americans from S. America? Give a reason for your answer.arrow_forward1. List three places outside of Africa where sickle-cell anemia is fairly common in the indigenous population: a. b. c. 2. Why hasn't the sickle-cell trait died out? 3. What is the ultimate source of biological variation? What is the difference between gene flow and genetic drift?arrow_forwardIn March 2013, the American Journal of HumanGenetics published a report that an AfricanAmerican man who submitted his genome forcommercial genealogical analysis had a Y chromosome whose sequence was very different from thatof other Y chromosomes that had been characterized previously. The investigators then found thatcertain males among the Mbo (an ethnic group inCameroon) shared many of the polymorphisms firstfound in this African-American man. How do youthink these findings would have altered estimates ofwhen a man carrying the MRCA for the human Ychromosome would have lived on the earth?arrow_forward
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