Evolution, 4th Edition

(Amelia) #1
84 CHAPTER 4

the probability that a sperm carries the A 2 allele times the probability that an egg
also carries the A 2 allele, or p^2. Likewise, the frequency of A 1 A 1 offspring is (1 – p)^2 ,
and the frequency of A 1 A 2 offspring is 2p(1 – p).
Putting those results together gives us the Hardy-Weinberg proportions:

Genotype: A 1 A 1 A 1 A 2 A 2 A 2
Frequency: (1 – p)^2 2 p(1 – p) p^2

An example with p = 0.7 is shown in Figure 4.6.
The key conditions for the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium are:


  • An infinite population size

  • No natural selection

  • No mutation

  • No movement between populations

  • Random mating


Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
Evolution4e_04.06.ai Date 11-07-2016 01-12-17

Frequency

A 1 A 1 A 1 A 2 A 2 A 2

0.50

0.75

(A) Adults

0

0.25

Frequency

A 1 A 1 A 1 A 2 A 2 A 2

0.09

0.42
0.50 0.49

0.75

0.09 0.21

0.21

0.3

0.7

A 1

0.3

A 1
0.7

A 2

Sperm

Eggs
A 2 0.49

(D) Offspring

0

0.25

Frequency

A 1 A 2

0.50

0.75

(B) Gametes

(C)

0

0.25

0.3

0.7

0.3

0.7

FIGURE 4.6 Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium results from the random union of gam-
etes. (A) In this example, 30% of the adults are A 1 A 1 homozygotes and 70% are A 2 A 2
homozygotes. The frequency of allele A 2 is p = 0.7 and the frequency of allele A 1 is
1 – p = 0.3. The population is not in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium: there are too few
heterozygotes. (B) The frequencies of the alleles in the sperm and eggs are the same
as in the adults. (C) The numbers inside the box are the frequencies of genotypes in
the offspring that are formed by random fertilization between sperm and eggs. (D)
The genotype frequencies among the offspring are found by adding up the cells
inside the box: the frequency of A 1 A 1 homozygotes is (1 – p)^2 = 0.09, the frequency of
A 1 A 2 heterozygotes is 2 p(1 – p) = 0.42, and the frequency of A 2 A 2 homozygotes is p^2 =
0.49. The genotype frequencies are different than they were in the parents (compare
panels A and D), and are now in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. The allele frequencies,
however, have not changed.

04_EVOL4E_CH04.indd 84 3/23/17 8:55 AM

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