Hardy-Weinberg Principle 😎
In any large, randomly mating population, the frequency of every allele stays the same generation after generation. This steady state of the gene pool is called genetic equilibrium. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}
The Magic Formula ✨
For two alleles A (frequency p) and a (frequency q) in a diploid organism:
$$ (p + q)^2 = p^2 + 2pq + q^2 = 1 $$
- AA individuals: \(p^2\)
- Aa individuals: \(2pq\)
- aa individuals: \(q^2\)
If the measured genotype numbers leave this pattern, the population is moving away from equilibrium—evolution is happening! :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
Five Forces that Break Equilibrium 💥
- Gene migration / Gene flow – individuals move in or out, bringing new alleles or removing old ones. 🌍
- Genetic drift – chance events shuffle allele frequencies; a small group can split off and start a new population (founder effect). 🎲
- Mutation – fresh changes in DNA create new alleles. 🔬
- Genetic recombination – reshuffling during gamete formation produces novel combinations. 🔄
- Natural selection – helpful variations spread because they boost survival and reproduction. 🌱
Any one (or a combo) of these nudges allele counts and sparks evolution. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
What Natural Selection Can Look Like 🎯
- Stabilising selection – the average trait wins; extremes shrink. 😌
- Directional selection – the curve shifts toward one extreme trait. 🏹
- Disruptive selection – both extremes thrive; the middle loses out. ⚡
Over time, repeated advantageous mutations plus selection can create entirely new species. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
High-Yield Ideas for NEET 🚀
- Remember the genotype ratio \(p^2 : 2pq : q^2\) and that \(p + q = 1\).
- Know the five factors (gene flow, drift, mutation, recombination, selection) that disturb Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium.
- Differentiate genetic drift (chance) from gene flow (migration) and grasp the founder effect.
- Link natural selection to its three patterns—stabilising, directional, disruptive.
- Use deviations from expected genotype frequencies to detect evolution in a population.
Happy studying—keep those alleles balanced! 🎉