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Effects of Genetic Drift (1 of 2)Through sampling error, genetic drift can cause populations to lose genetic variation. Decreasing variation: |
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The same thing can happen to populations. If the gene for green coloration drifts out of the population, the gene is gone for goodunless, of course, a mutation or gene flow reintroduces the green gene. The 10:0 situation illustrates one of the most important effects of genetic drift: it reduces the amount of genetic variation in a population. And with less genetic variation, there is less for natural selection to work with. If the green gene drifts out of the population, and the population ends up in a situation where it would be advantageous to be green, the population is out of luck. Selection cannot increase the frequency of the green gene, because it�s not there for selection to act on. Selection can only act on what variation is already in a population; it cannot create variation.
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