Biology, asked by prathyusha3678, 2 months ago

You sample a population of butterflies and find that 56% are heterozygous at a particular locus .what should be the frequency of the homozygous individual in this population

Answers

Answered by ashagupta03021977
0

Answer:

what will be frequency of papulation if tasters aregdgdfrfdt the way I can do it for you to the dark knight rises to them and you can do next-generationYou sample a population of butterflies and

Answered by tripathiakshita48
0

The frequency of homozygous individuals in a population can be calculated from the frequency of heterozygous individuals. If p is the frequency of one of the alleles in a population and q is the frequency of the other allele, then the frequency of heterozygotes (individuals carrying both alleles) is 2pq, and the frequency of homozygotes (individuals carrying only one allele) is p^2 for homozygotes with the first allele and q^2 for homozygotes with the second allele.

In your sample, the frequency of heterozygotes is 56%, so 2pq = 0.56. Solving for p and q, we can see that p + q = 1 (because every individual in the population has two alleles). Therefore, q = 1 - p. Substituting q into the equation for heterozygotes, we have 2p(1 - p) = 0.56, which can be solved for p.

Once we have p, we can calculate the frequency of homozygotes: p^2 for the first allele and (1 - p)^2 for the second allele.

Note that in real populations, there is often more genetic variation than described by just two alleles, so these calculations are an approximation.

For more such questions on sampling: https://brainly.in/question/21388207

#SPJ3

Similar questions