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Genetic divergence between related populations sometimes start by genetic bottleneck, and founder effects.
Causes of Genetic Divergence
[edit]One possible cause of genetic divergence is the founder effect, which is when a few individuals become isolated from their original population. Those individuals might overrepresent a certain genetic pattern, which means that certain biological characteristics are overrepresented. These individuals can form a new population with different gene pools from the original population. For example, 10% of the original population has blue eyes and 90% has brown eyes. By chance, 10 individuals are separated from the original population. If this small group has 80% blue eyes and 20% brown eyes, then their offspring would be more likely to have the allele for the blue eyes. As a result, the percentage of the population with blue eyes would be higher than the population with brown eyes, which is different from the original population. Another possible cause of genetic divergence is the bottleneck effect. The bottleneck effect is when an event, such as a natural disaster, causes a large portion of the population to die. By chance, certain genetic patterns will be overrepresented in the remaining population, which similar to what happens with the founder effect. [1]
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- ^ Campbell biology. Reece, Jane B., Campbell, Neil A., 1946-2004. (9th ed ed.). Boston: Benjamin Cummings / Pearson. 2011. pp. 476–480. ISBN 978-0-321-55823-7. OCLC 624556031.
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