Lecture 53. Pop Genetics & Looking Ahead to Year 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is a population?

A

A group of individuals of the same species that are able to interbreed

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2
Q

What are sub-populations?

A

Where some species occupy a wide geographic range

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3
Q

What is the purpose of population genetics?

A

To see genetic structure of a population (the number of alleles and frequency of each within a population (gene pool))
To see geographic patterns in distribution of allelic variation within and amongst sub-populations
To see temporal changes in genetic structure of a population

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4
Q

What are the applications of population genetics?

A

Species conservation and utilisation of biodiversity
Essential for Genome-Wide Association Mapping (GWAM)

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5
Q

What is the Hardy-Weinberg principle?

A

Method for investigating the movement of alleles in populations

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6
Q

What is the Hardy-Weinberg principle essential for?

A

Understanding mechanisms of evolutionary change (e.g speciation)

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7
Q

Using the Hardy-Weinberg principle, what are the starting parameters you must assume?

A

Infinitely large population
Random mating amongst individuals
No new mutations, migration or natural selection

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8
Q

In the Hardy-Weinberg principle, what represent the frequency of the dominant allele?

A

p

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9
Q

In the Hardy-Weinberg principle, what represent the frequency of the recessive allele?

A

q = (1-p)

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10
Q

What is the total of genotype frequencies in the Hardy-Weinberg principle?

A

p² + 2pq + q² = 1

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11
Q

What are the five things that can cause a change in genetic structure?

A

Mutation
Migration
Natural selection
Genetic drift
Non-random mating

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12
Q

What are the three types of new alleles that mutations create?

A

Lethal, neutral and beneficial

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13
Q

What is the ultimate source of all genetic variation?

A

Mutations

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14
Q

How does migration cause a change in genetic structure?

A

New individuals move into a population, which introduces new alleles “gene flow”

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15
Q

What is natural selection?

A

Differences in survival or reproduction which leased to adaptation
Differences in “fitness”

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16
Q

What are the four types of natural selection?

A

Directional selection
Stabilising selection
Disruptive selection
Balancing selection

17
Q

What does directional selection favour?

A

Individuals at one extreme of a phenotypic distribution, which have greater reproductive success in a particular environment

18
Q

What does stabilising selection favour?

A

Survival of individuals with intermediate phenotypes
Extreme phenotypes are selected against

19
Q

What is an example of a stabilising selection factor?

A

Bird clutch size
Too many eggs and offspring die due to lack of care and food
Too few eggs does not contribute enough to next generation

20
Q

What does disruptive selection favour?

A

The survival of two or more different genotypes that each produce different phenotypes

21
Q

Where is disruptive selection likely to occur?

A

Populations that occupy diverse environments

22
Q

When does balancing selection occur?

A

When two or more alleles are kept in balance, and therefore are maintained in a population over many generations

23
Q

What symbol represents a heterozygote advantage?

A

Hˢ allele

24
Q

What is an example of balancing selection?

A

Sickle cell allele or malaria in Africa

25
Q

What is genetic drift?

A

Random loss of alleles from a population due to chance event(s)

26
Q

What populations are more stable, large or small?

A

Large

27
Q

What does genetic drift result in?

A

Loss of genetic variation

28
Q

What are genetic bottlenecks?

A

A sudden decrease in population size caused by adverse environmental factors

29
Q

What are founder effects?

A

Dispersal and migration that establish new populations with low genetic diversity

30
Q

What is assortative mating?

A

Individuals with similar phenotypes are more likely to mate
Increases the frequency of homozygotes

31
Q

What is disassortative mating?

A

Dissimilar phenotypes mate preferentially
Favors heterozygosity