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Which term can be applied to a population that is not in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium? large stable stagnant evolving

2 Answers

5 votes
evolving, as it is the only answer that means to change.
Hope I helped:)
User Richard Hood
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4 votes

Answer:

Evolving.

Step-by-step explanation:

The Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium emphasizes that if evolutionary factors such as natural selection, mutation, migration and genetic oscillation do not act on a given population, gene frequencies and genotypic proportions will remain constant. This means that if there are, for example, alleles B and b in a population, they do not change their rates over a long period of time. These rates would only change if evolutionary mechanisms occurred.

For this reason, we can say that "evolving" is the term that can be applied to a population that is not in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.

User Mohammadalijf
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8.1k points