mutation cannot occur . Mutation cannot occur.
Mates selected by character traits
Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium shows conditions under which allele frequencies remain unaltered over generations
The five assumptions of the Hardy-Weinberg genetic equilibrium are:
1 No mutations
2 No gene flow, that is, no transfer of alleles from one population to another
3 No genetic drift, or no changes due to chance
4 No natural selection--no particular trait can be favored
5 Random mating--no favoring of traits
That the percentages are not exact. It's only exact when there is no disturbance in the gene pool and species only interbreed.
The conditions for the Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium are no mutation, migration, natural selection or random drift.
Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium
allele frequency
BottleneckThat is a condition of the Hardy-Weinberg law and the population is said to be in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium , but it is an idealization that never happens in nature.
when there is no gene flow between different populations
The immigrating individuals do not at all interact with the pre-existing population in any way.
it ruins the equilibrium
Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium
Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium
Hardy-Weinberg Principle.
Mutation cannot occur
Allele frequency is stable
Mutation cannot occur
allele frequency
No disruptive circumstances must be present in random mating in a population for Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium to occur. Mating must happen randomly. No allele can give an advantage
A large population residing on an isolated island is more likely to reach Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.
Conditions of the Hardy-Weinberg EquilibriumRandom matingNo natural selectionNo gene flow (migrations)Large population sizeNo mutations
mating must happen randomly