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HomeHomework HelpbiologyHardy-Weinberg Equilibrium

Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium

Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium is a principle stating that in a large, randomly mating population with no evolutionary influences, the allele and genotype frequencies will remain constant from generation to generation. This equilibrium is maintained under five conditions: no mutations, random mating, no natural selection, extremely large population size, and no gene flow.

intermediate
2 hours
Biology
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Overview

The Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium is a foundational concept in population genetics that describes how allele frequencies remain stable in a population under certain ideal conditions. It serves as a model to understand genetic variation and the forces that can disrupt this balance, such as natural selec...

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Key Terms

Allele
Different forms of a gene that can exist at a specific locus.

Example: The gene for flower color may have a red allele and a white allele.

Genotype
The genetic constitution of an individual, represented by the alleles it possesses.

Example: A plant with two red alleles is homozygous for red color.

Phenotype
The observable characteristics of an organism, resulting from the interaction of its genotype with the environment.

Example: The red flowers of a plant are its phenotype.

Frequency
The proportion of a particular allele or genotype in a population.

Example: If 70 out of 100 alleles are red, the frequency of the red allele is 0.7.

Mutation
A change in the DNA sequence that can lead to new alleles.

Example: A mutation may change a flower's color from red to blue.

Gene Flow
The transfer of alleles or genes from one population to another.

Example: Pollen from one population of flowers can fertilize another, introducing new alleles.

Related Topics

Population Genetics
The study of genetic variation within populations and how it changes over time.
intermediate
Evolutionary Biology
The study of the processes that have led to the diversity of life on Earth.
advanced
Genetic Drift
A mechanism of evolution that involves random changes in allele frequencies, especially in small populations.
intermediate
Natural Selection
The process by which organisms better adapted to their environment tend to survive and reproduce.
intermediate

Key Concepts

Allele FrequencyGenotype FrequencyEquilibrium ConditionsPopulation Genetics