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29 November, 10:01

For each population description, identify which Hardy-Weinberg assumption is violated?

1. A small and isolated population of seals living in a stable environment with no genetic mutations.

2. A large population of fish where females mate with males based on size.

3. A population of birds with no genetic mutations that often mate with members of neighboring bird populations.

4. A large population of squirrels in a stable environment in which mating is random and the mutation rate is very low but constant.

5. A population of spiders living in an environment that strongly favors larger individuals.

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  1. 29 November, 11:37
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    4. A large and isolated population of squirrels in a relatively stable environment in which no genetic mutations are occurring and mating between males and females is random.

    Explanation:

    1. A small and isolated population of seals living in a stable environment with no genetic mutations.❌

    1. false

    Hardy-Weinberg assumption is not violated for a small population as seen in this case.

    2. A large population of fish where females mate with males based on size.❌

    false

    Hardy-Weinberg assumption is not violated for an instance where mating is not random as seen in this scenario.

    3. A population of birds with no genetic mutations that often mate with members of neighboring bird populations.❌

    False

    Hardy-Weinberg assumption is not violated for where gene flow is seen among population in this scenario.

    4. A large and isolated population of squirrels in a relatively stable environment in which no genetic mutations are occurring and mating between males and females is random.✔

    True

    Hardy-Weinberg assumption is violated for in this situation due to large population size.

    5. A small population of spiders living in an environment that strongly favors larger individuals.❌

    false

    Hardy-Weinberg assumption is violated for a small population and natural selection occurring as its obvious in this case.

    There are five primary Hardy-Weinberg assumptions:

    A. no mutation,

    B. random mating,

    C. No gene flow,

    D. infinite population size,

    E. No selection.

    If the assumptions are exempted in a gene, the population of that gene might undergo evolution causing a resultant change in the gene's allele frequencies.
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