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One of the assumptions of the hardyweinberg law is

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One of the assumptions of the Hardy–Weinberg law is that migration does not take place, but many naturalpopulations do experience migration from other populationsThe overall effect of migration is twofold:(1) it prevents populations from becoming genetically different from one another(2) it increases genetic variation within populations.The Effect of Migration on Allelic FrequenciesIn each generation, a representative sample of the individuals in population I migrates to population II andreproduces, adding its alleles to population II’s gene poolMigration is only from population I to population II (unidirectional), and all the conditions of the Hardy–Weinberg law (large population size, random mating, etc.) apply except the absence of migration.After migration, population II consists of two types of individuals:(1) migrants with alleles from population I(2) the original residents with alleles from population IIThe allelic frequencies in population II after migration depend on the contributions of alleles from themigrants and from the original residents
The amount of change in the frequency of alleleain population II is directly proportional to the amount ofmigration; as the amount of migration increases, the change in allelic frequency increasesThe magnitude of change is also affected by the difference in allelic frequencies between the twopopulations; when the difference is large, the change in allelic frequency will be large.With each generation of migration, the allelic frequencies of the two populations become more and moresimilar until eventually, the frequencies of population II equal those of population IWhen the allelic frequencies are equal, there will be no further change in the allelic frequencies of popula-tion II, in spite of the fact that migration continuesIf migration between two populations takes place for a number of generations with no other evolutionaryforces present, an equilibrium is reached at which the allelic frequencies of the recipient population equalthose of the source population.The simple model of unidirectional migration between two populations just outlined can be expanded toaccommodate multidirectional migration between several populations.The Overall Effect of MigrationMigration has two major effectsFirst, it causes the gene pools of separate populations to become more similargenetic drift and natural selection lead to genetic differences between populations;migration counteracts this tendency and tends to keep populations homogeneous in theirallelic frequenciesSecond, migration adds genetic variation to populationsDifferent alleles may arise in different populations owing to rare mutational events, andthese alleles can be spread to new populations by migration, increasing the geneticvariation within the recipient population.

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