Final answer:
A population with no Hardy-Weinberg principle violations stays in genetic equilibrium, where allele and genotype frequencies remain constant over generations, indicating no evolutionary change.
Step-by-step explanation:
If our population has no violations of the Hardy-Weinberg principles assumptions, it will not change generation after generation and will remain in genetic equilibrium. The Hardy-Weinberg model requires five conditions to maintain this equilibrium: (1) No change in the DNA sequence due to mutation, (2) No migration in or out of the population, (3) A very large population size that minimizes genetic drift, (4) Random mating within the population, and (5) No natural selection affecting the survival of particular genotypes. When these conditions are met, the frequencies of alleles and genotypes in the population will remain constant from one generation to the next, indicating that no evolutionary change is taking place.