If a population is in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, which of the following statements is correct

Recommended textbook solutions

Miller and Levine Biology

1st EditionJoseph S. Levine, Kenneth R. Miller

1,773 solutions

Campbell Biology (AP Edition)

9th EditionCain, Jackson, Minorsky, Reece, Urry, Wasserman

715 solutions

Fundamentals of Biochemistry

5th EditionCharlotte W. Pratt, Donald Voet, Judith G. Voet

980 solutions

Biocalculus: Calculus, Probability, and Statistics for the Life Sciences

1st EditionDay, Stewart

5,060 solutions

Which of the following is the correct for the Hardy

Correct answer: The conditions to maintain the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium are: no mutation, no gene flow, large population size, random mating, and no natural selection.

What happens to a population that is in Hardy

When a population is in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium for a gene, it is not evolving, and allele frequencies will stay the same across generations. There are five basic Hardy-Weinberg assumptions: no mutation, random mating, no gene flow, infinite population size, and no selection.

Which of the following characteristics is true of a population at Hardy

What must be true for a population to be in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium? There must be random mating in the population; there must be an infinite population size; and there must be no evolution occurring (no natural selection, no genetic drift, no migration and no mutation).

When a population is in Hardy

Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium: the condition in which both allele and genotype frequencies in a population remain constant from generation to generation unless specific disturbances occur. -A population in Hardy-Weinburg equilibrium is not changing genetically, not evolving.

Toplist

Neuester Beitrag

Stichworte