Genetic Analysis: An Integrated Approach (2nd Edition)
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9780321948908
Author: Mark F. Sanders, John L. Bowman
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 22, Problem 7P
Over the course of many generations in a small population, what effect does random genetic drift have on allele frequencies?
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How does population size affect the likelihood of changes in allele frequencies by chance alone? Can significant changes in allele frequencies (that is, evolution) occur as a result of genetic drift?
Why is genetic drift more significant in small populations? Why does it take longer for genetic drift to cause allele fixation in large populations than in small ones?
What is the intuitive meaning of the mean fitness of a population? How does its value change in response to natural selection?
Chapter 22 Solutions
Genetic Analysis: An Integrated Approach (2nd Edition)
Ch. 22 - 20.1 Compare and contrast the terms in each of the...Ch. 22 - In a population, what is the consequence of...Ch. 22 - 20.3 Identify and describe the evolutionary forces...Ch. 22 - Describe how natural selection can produce...Ch. 22 - Thinking creatively about evolutionary mechanisms,...Ch. 22 - 20.6 Genetic drift, an evolutionary process...Ch. 22 - Over the course of many generations in a small...Ch. 22 - Catastrophic events such as loss of habitat,...Ch. 22 - 20.9 George Udny Yule was wrong in suggesting that...Ch. 22 - 20.10 The ability to taste the bitter compound...
Ch. 22 - Figure 20.6 illustrates the effect of an ethanol ...Ch. 22 - 20.12 Biologists have proposed that the use of...Ch. 22 - 20.13 Two populations of deer, one of them large...Ch. 22 - 20.14 Directional selection presents an apparent...Ch. 22 - 20.15 What is inbreeding depression? Why is...Ch. 22 - 20.16 Certain animal species, such as the...Ch. 22 - Genetic Analysis 20.1 predicts the number of...Ch. 22 - 20.18 In a population of rabbits, and . The...Ch. 22 - Sickle cell disease (SCD) is found in numerous...Ch. 22 - 20.20 Epidemiologic data on the population in the...Ch. 22 - The frequency of tasters and nontasters of PTC...Ch. 22 - Tay-Sachs disease is an autosomal recessive...Ch. 22 - 20.23 Cystic fibrosis (CF) is the most common...Ch. 22 - 20.24 In the mouse, Mus musculus, survival in...Ch. 22 - 20.25 In a population of flowers growing in a...Ch. 22 - Assume that the flower population described in the...Ch. 22 - 20.27 ABO blood type is examined in a Taiwanese...Ch. 22 - 20.28 A total ofmembers of a Central American...Ch. 22 - 20.29 A sample offield mice contains individuals...Ch. 22 - Prob. 30PCh. 22 - Albinism, an autosomal recessive trait...Ch. 22 - Prob. 32PCh. 22 - 20.33 Evaluate the following pedigree, and answer...Ch. 22 - Evaluate the following pedigree, and answer the...Ch. 22 - The following is a partial pedigree of the British...Ch. 22 - Draw a separate hypothetical pedigree identifying...Ch. 22 - Prob. 37PCh. 22 - 20.38 Achromatopsia is a rare autosomal recessive...Ch. 22 - 20.39 New allopolyploid plant species can arise by...
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Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, biology and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- How Can We Measure Allele Frequencies in Populations? The MN blood group is a single-gene, two-allele system in which each allele is codominant. Why are such codominant alleles ideal for studies of allele frequencies in a population?arrow_forwardHow Can We Measure Allele Frequencies in Populations? Drawing on your newly acquired understanding of the HardyWeinberg equilibrium law, point out why the following statement is erroneous: Because most of the people in Sweden have blond hair and blue eyes, the genes for blond hair and blue eyes must be dominant in that population.arrow_forwardWhat Causes Allele Frequencies to Change in Real Populations?arrow_forward
- Why the impact of genetic drift is more significant in smaller population?arrow_forwardWhat is effective population size? How does it affect the amount of genetic drift?arrow_forwardUnder what scenaries is genetic drift most potent as an evolutionary process? how do factors like population size and initial allele frequences affect likelihood of an allele being lost from a population (or becoming fixed)?arrow_forward
- How does population size affect genetic drift?arrow_forwardWhat does the Hardy-Weinberg model tell us about the factors that can change allele frequencies in populations and result in evolution? What are those factors, and what effect will they have on a biological population?arrow_forwardIf allele frequencies do not change from one generation to the next, is the population definitely in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium? Why or why not?arrow_forward
- Does inbreeding affect allele frequencies? Why or why not? How does it affect genotype frequencies? With regard to rare recessive diseases, what are the consequences of inbreeding in human populations?arrow_forwardWhen two populations frequently intermix due to migration, what are the long-term consequences with regard to allele frequencies and genetic variation?arrow_forwardWhy is population level genetic variation important for evolution and what causes genetic variation ? How do we detect if evolution is occurring ?arrow_forward
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