(BIOH) Population Genetics and Microevolutionary Mechanisms (Reading Check)

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Kimanh Nguyen

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May 24, 2012, 9:21:46 PM5/24/12
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1. Directional selection is a natural selection in which individuals at one end of the phenotypic range survive or reproduce more successfully than the other individuals.
2. Why do organisms with a high overall fitness have alleles that do not help them during their "struggle for existence"?
3. No questions posted yet.
4. This topic gives a clearer understanding of how natural selection plays a role on individuals' chances of surviving and reproducing successfully.
5. Natural selection can help organisms fit better into their environment to lower the chances of predators tracking and eating them.
6. I like this topic. I found it interesting. 

Braojos, Marilyn

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May 30, 2012, 11:12:36 PM5/30/12
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1. I learned that disruptive selection can lead to speciation, and that it goes from central, or balanced looks to the extremes. I also learned that stabilizing selection is when only one look is favorable, or the accumulation toward a balanced look. Directional selection is when one look is favored, which "changes" the population from one end to the other. Oscillating selection is when the looks fluctuate from one end to the other in a back and forth pattern.
2. I need further explanation of the bottleneck effect.
3. By my understanding of Kim's question, organisms with high overall fitness have alleles that do not help them during their struggle for existance, because of environmental factors, and/or heterozygote advantage, dominant protective allele, or recessive protective allele advantages.
4. It is important to learn about this information in order to understand the factors that contribute to why and how environmental factors affect the way that organisms/ populations look they way they do.
5. This information can be used to manage organisms/populations.
6. I liked the topic, videos, and the activities for this topic.

Munoz, Pedro

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May 31, 2012, 1:42:56 PM5/31/12
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1.) I learned that the equation for the Hardy Weinburg theorem is p^2 + 2pq + q^2
2.) How exactly do genetic structures change in more detail?
3.)  The Bottleneck effect is the effect in which it may reduced genetic variability after a drastic reduction in the population that removes a large amount of the population The surviving population usually has a diff. allele frequency than the original and then create a new population usually not expressing the original alleles.
4.) This is important because it teaches people about why animals are the way they are; by different factors in the environment
5.) It can be used in real life to understand the frequencies of alleles in a population
6.) I really liked this topic since it has so much math!!!!!
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