Elite Engineer Posted July 17, 2016 Share Posted July 17, 2016 Just a curious thought if a random polymorphism could ever become a dominant trait in a population without any kind of selective pressure on the gene. ~EE Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CharonY Posted July 18, 2016 Share Posted July 18, 2016 I assume you used the term "dominant" in a different context than in the genetic sense? I.e. do you mean frequency rather than the effect on phenotype? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Elite Engineer Posted July 19, 2016 Author Share Posted July 19, 2016 I assume you used the term "dominant" in a different context than in the genetic sense? I.e. do you mean frequency rather than the effect on phenotype? Yes, my bad. I meant frequency. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CharonY Posted July 19, 2016 Share Posted July 19, 2016 You can have stochastic effects, mainly genetic drift and mutations affecting allele frequencies. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Itoero Posted September 27, 2016 Share Posted September 27, 2016 (edited) Just a curious thought if a random polymorphism could ever become a dominant trait in a population without any kind of selective pressure on the gene. ~EE Can you give an (theoretical) example? There is always selective pressure. Edited September 27, 2016 by Itoero Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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