EBK GENETICS: FROM GENES TO GENOMES
EBK GENETICS: FROM GENES TO GENOMES
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781260041255
Author: HARTWELL
Publisher: MCGRAW HILL BOOK COMPANY
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Chapter 21, Problem 25P

In a population of infinite size, three loci A, B, and C have two alleles each. Alleles A1, B1, and C1 are found in 1% of the population at a particular moment in time, and each has beneficial effects on the organisms’ fitnesses as compared to the other allele of that locus (A2, B2, and C2, respectively). The relative fitnesses of the three possible genotypes at each of these loci is:

 Chapter 21, Problem 25P, In a population of infinite size, three loci A, B, and C have two alleles each. Alleles A1, B1, and , example  1

The frequencies of alleles A, B, and C over thousands of generations is shown in the following graph:

 Chapter 21, Problem 25P, In a population of infinite size, three loci A, B, and C have two alleles each. Alleles A1, B1, and , example  2

a. Which line (blue, red, or green) corresponds to A1? B1? C1?
b. Why does the allele represented by the red line go to fixation more quickly than that represented by the green line?
c. Why does the allele represented by the blue line go to fixation more slowly than the alleles represented by either the red or green lines?
d. Suppose the population only had 1000 individuals. Discuss how this change in population size might affect the shapes of the three lines.
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Chapter 21 Solutions

EBK GENETICS: FROM GENES TO GENOMES

Ch. 21 - It is the year 1998, and the men and women sailors...Ch. 21 - a. Alleles of genes on the X chromosome can also...Ch. 21 - In 1927, the ophthalmologist George Waaler tested...Ch. 21 - The equation p2 2pq q2> = 1 representing the...Ch. 21 - A gene has two alleles A frequency = p and a...Ch. 21 - Some people can taste the bitter compound...Ch. 21 - Androgenetic alopecia pattern baldness is a...Ch. 21 - The following figure shows the FBI-style analysis...Ch. 21 - Why is the elimination of a fully recessive...Ch. 21 - Tristan da Cunha is a group of small islands in...Ch. 21 - Small population size causes genetic drift because...Ch. 21 - Three basic predictions underlie genetic drift in...Ch. 21 - A mouse mutation with incomplete dominance t =...Ch. 21 - In Drosophila, the vestigial wings recessive...Ch. 21 - In a population of infinite size, three loci A, B,...Ch. 21 - You have identified an autosomal gene that...Ch. 21 - In Europe, the frequency of the CF allele causing...Ch. 21 - An allele of the G6PD gene acts in a recessive...Ch. 21 - Explain why evolutionary biologists monitor...Ch. 21 - Tiny foxes live on the Channel Islands off the...Ch. 21 - What is the most straightforward evidence at the...Ch. 21 - In March 2013, the American Journal of Human...Ch. 21 - If you go back 40 generations into your biological...Ch. 21 - In Fig. 21.17, to what part of the world does...Ch. 21 - Predict the DNA sequences at the four nodes...Ch. 21 - A cladogram not drawn to scale for the taxonomic...Ch. 21 - As noted in Fig. 21.22, humans now living in...Ch. 21 - As of this writing in 2016, no Neanderthal-derived...
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