no
No. Evolution is the change in allele ( different molecular forms of the same gene ) frequency over time in a population of organisms. No equilibrium there.
incomplete dominance
In genetic equilibrium, the allelic frequencies of a gene remain constant over generations. This equilibrium occurs when certain conditions are met, such as no mutation, migration, genetic drift, or natural selection affecting the gene pool. Any deviation from these conditions can disrupt the equilibrium and cause changes in allelic frequencies.
The genetic equilibrium of a population can be disturbed by mutation, gene flow, genetic drift, and natural selection.
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All of the ones needed to exist by the owner of the gene.
Mutation is the factor that does not take a population out of Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. The other factors that can disrupt equilibrium are natural selection, genetic drift, gene flow, and non-random mating.
gene pool
Gene pool
Gene pool
Gene cloning is considered complete when the gene of interest has been successfully inserted into a cloning vector, the vector has been introduced into a host organism, and the gene has been expressed. This can be validated by various methods such as DNA sequencing to confirm the presence of the gene, PCR to amplify the gene fragment, and protein expression assays to show functional protein production.
One condition for Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium is a large population size. This ensures that genetic drift, which is the random change in allele frequencies, has minimal effect on the gene pool.