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The phenotype frequency does not change.

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Breanna Torres

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4y ago

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Related Questions

Which population is most likely to be in Hardy-equilibrium?

A large population residing on an isolated island is more likely to reach Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.


What is it called when a population is not evolving?

Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium


When allele frequencies are not changing it is called?

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.


Is hardy weinberg equilibrium obtainable in a plant population?

Yes it is obtainable in plant population


What happen when a population is is Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium?

Allele frequency is stable


Which factor does not take a population out of Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium?

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.


What is the relationship between Hardy-Wienberg equilibrium and evolution?

When an organism is in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium there is no evolution. There is no mutation, mating is random and thus no natural selection. Naturally, outside of labs this condition is never seen.


How does mutation work against the Hardy and Weinberg equilibrium?

Mutations introduce new genetic variation into a population, which can disrupt the balance of allele frequencies required for the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. If a mutation increases the frequency of a particular allele, it can lead to deviations from the expected genotype frequencies under the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.


What happen when a population is in a Hardy equilibrium?

Allele frequency is stable The phenotype frequency does not change.


If a new allele appears in the population the Hardy Weinberg formula?

If a new allele appears in a population, the Hardy-Weinberg formula cannot be used. This is because there is now no equilibrium.


A population in which allele frequencies do not change from generation to generation is said to be in?

A population in which the allele frequencies do not change from one generation to the next is said to be in equilibrium.


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.