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Three ways genetic equilibrium can be disrupted include, mating not being random, mutations occur, and natural selection occurs. Two other disruptions are organisms move in and out of the populations and many populations are too small to begin with.

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9y ago
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11y ago

well i really dod not know but i think is frog

stop cheating on your homework (It's called research, 95% of the teachers rocommend it, your obvously old.)

^^^^^^^ To the person who answered this above:

I recommend you learn how to spell or invest in something called "spell check" because the statement written above is certainly not acceptable.

Oh, really? My bad. I really tried to impress you. dick

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13y ago

the first requirement is that allele frequencies not change overall because of mutations, the second requirement is that the population remain constant,the third requirement is the presence of a large population, the fourth requirement is random matings, and the fifth requirement is the absence of natural selection.

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13y ago

Four possible causes are selective pressure (one genotype being a better fit to the environment), admixture (new members leaving or entering the population), founders effect where population size is not sufficiently large enough, and no random breeding, where mate selection is preferential to certain genotypes choosing each other.

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9y ago

To be sure, there's no such thing as genetic equilibrium, and evolution is continuously occurring: it cannot be prevented. Genetic equilibrium is a theoretical concept used to study the dymamics of single alleles in the population gene pool.

However, there are situations in which the overall morphological makeup of a population is more or less stable - even if the details of that makeup continuously drift. Such a semi-stable situation could be disturbed by any factor: migration; climate change; floods; geological disasters such as volcanic eruptions or earthquakes; the introduction of new prey, new predators, new diseases; the disappearance of prey, predators or diseases; population growth; runaway sexual selection; and so forth, and so on.

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11y ago

1. There must be no genetic drift

2. No gene flow

3. No mutation

4. Mating must be random

5.No natural selection

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11y ago

- Random Mating

- Large Populations

- No movement in or out of population

- No mutations

- No natural selection

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13y ago

mutation, migration, genetic drift

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12y ago

All Of the Above

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Q: What are five conditions that can disrupt genetic equilibrium and cause evolution to occur?
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Related questions

Which factor would most likely disrupt genetic equilibrium in a large population?

Genetic Drift


What factor would most likely disrupt genetic equilibrium in a large population?

Nonrandom mating.


Are genetic equilibrium and evolution the same?

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.


How do change Genetic equilibrium lead to speciation?

Allele frequency is altered by genetic drift, natural selection, migration, mutation, or nonrandom mating. This results in a change in genetic equilibrium in a population that is evolving. Evolution leads eventually to speciation.


One of the conditions required to maintain genetic equilibrium is?

D. no movement into or out of the population


What is it called when no evolution takes place?

When no evolution takes place in a population, it is called genetic equilibrium or genetic stasis. This means that the allele frequencies in the population remain constant over generations.


Is it true Changes in the genetic equilibrium of a population can create a new species in a rapid burst of time?

Changes in genetic equilibrium can lead to speciation over longer periods of time, typically spanning thousands to millions of years. Rapid bursts of speciation, known as adaptive radiations, can occur in certain circumstances such as when a population undergoes rapid environmental changes, leading to the rise of multiple new species in a relatively short time span.


How does migration affect the genetic equilibrium of a population?

Migration affects the genetic equilibrium of a population by maintaining it.


What genetic change is always a result of evolution?

Evolution is not a cause of genetic change: it is the effect of genetic change.


The situation in which allele frequencies of a population remain constant is called?

That situation is called a Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. Not actually seen outside of the lab.


What are the eight unifying themes of botany?

The unifying themes of botany are: Evolution, ecology, genetic continuity and reproduction, growth, development and differentiation, force matter and organization, maintenance and dynamic equilibrium


Genetic equilibrium is the alteration of allelic frequencies by chance processes?

genetic drift