00:01
In the internet all this question, let's talk about sald -wemmer equilibrium.
00:03
It says how the wemmer equilibrium serves as a standard of comparison to determine whether population is evolving.
00:11
And the answer here is going to be true.
00:14
True because practically remember that when a population is in hardy -womer equilibrium, it means that the population is not evolving.
00:23
It's not evolving.
00:24
So if they tell you that a population is in highly -women equilibrium, then it means that it is not evolved.
00:29
Okay, in practically the frequencies of alleles and genotypes in the population are not going to change from one generation to another.
00:36
So option one is true.
00:39
Question number two says, which is the following equations since you calculate the allele frequencies, okay? so remember that according to hardly weinberg, p plus q is equal to 1, where p is a frequency of alis in the population that dominant alis, and q is a frequency of alits in the population that are recessive alils.
00:57
Also you have that p square plus two pq, plus q square is equal to 1, where p square is a frequency of individuals in this population that are fomozygos dominant.
01:09
2pq is the frequency of individuals in the population that are heterocygous domino...