Allele Frequency, Hardy-Weinberg, and Genetic Drift

Allele Frequency, Hardy-Weinberg, and Genetic Drift

Assessment

Flashcard

Science

9th - 10th Grade

Hard

NGSS
HS-LS4-3, HS-LS3-2, HS-LS4-4

+1

Standards-aligned

Created by

Wayground Content

FREE Resource

Student preview

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15 questions

Show all answers

1.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

What does it mean for a population to be in genetic equilibrium according to Hardy-Weinberg assumptions?

Back

It means the population is not evolving.

2.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

What is the term for the movement of alleles from one population to another?

Back

Gene flow.

3.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

True or False: Adaptations are features you are born with that can help or hurt you in your environment.

Back

True.

Tags

NGSS.HS-LS4-3

NGSS.HS-LS4-4

4.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

In an isolated population with no new immigrants, where do new genetic variations most likely come from?

Back

Mutations.

Tags

NGSS.HS-LS3-2

NGSS.HS-LS4-2

5.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

True or False: Small populations are more prone to genetic drift than large populations.

Back

True.

Tags

NGSS.HS-LS4-3

6.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

What are the five Hardy-Weinberg assumptions?

Back

1. Large population size 2. No mutations 3. No gene flow 4. Random mating 5. No natural selection.

7.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

What is genetic drift?

Back

A mechanism of evolution that refers to random changes in allele frequencies in a population.

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