Logo Dictionary of Botany
header1 header2
Main Menu
Home
entries
Search
Popular
Home arrow entries arrow H arrow Hardy-Weinberg law

Hardy-Weinberg law

The law stating that, provided certain conditions are met, the gene (allele) frequencies in a Population of organisms will remain constant and be distributed as p2, 2pq, and q2 for the genotypes AA, Aa, and aa respectively where p = the frequency of the dominant allele and q = the frequency of the recessive allele, such that p + q = 1 (i.e. A and a are the only alleles). The law only holds providing that: the population is large (theoretically infinite); the population has been produced by random breeding; there is no natural selection for or against any particular genotype; there is no differential migration into or from the population; and there is no mutation. Despite these conditions, Hardy and Weinberg's law is the basic theorem of population genetics. From it can be calculated the frequencies of A and a, even though a significant proportion of the a alleles are masked in heterozygotes. Thus the frequency of a (q) = √(fre-quency of homozygous recessives), and the frequency of A (p) = 1 - q. If a population does not fit the distribution p2 + 2pq + q2 then one or more of the conditions stated above are not being fulfilled. The usual reason is natural selection against a particular phenotype. The theorem can be extended to enable the effects of natural selection on gene frequencies to be calculated. In effect, this provides a yardstick by which the rate of evolution can be measured and quantitatively defined.


 
< Prev   Next >
Alphabetical Listing

A B C D E
F G H I J
K L M N O
P Q R S T
U  V  W  X  Y
Z
footer1 footer2
send feedback