Student Exploration: Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium
Vocabulary: allele, genotype, Hardy-Weinberg equation, Hardy-Weinberg principle,
heterozygous,
... [Show More] homozygous, Punnett square
Prior Knowledge Questions (Do these BEFORE using the Gizmo.)
Suppose the feather color of a bird is controlled by two alleles, D and d. The D allele results in
dark feathers, while the d allele results in lighter feathers.
1. Suppose two Dd birds mate. What percentages of DD, Dd, and dd
offspring would you predict? Use the Punnett square at right to
help determine your answer.
DD: 25% Dd: 50% dd: 25%
2. In this situation, what ratio of heterozygous (Dd) to homozygous (DD and dd) offspring
would you expect to find? 1:1 ratio of heterozygous (Dd) to homozygous (DD and dd).
Gizmo Warm-up
Many factors—immigration, natural selection, hunting, and
so forth—can influence the composition of a population. To
determine if one of these factors is affecting a population, it
is useful to know what a population looks like when none
of these factors is present.
In 1908, Godfrey Hardy and Wilhelm Weinberg independently discovered the laws that govern
such populations. These laws can be explored in the Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Gizmo™.
1. The parrots you see on the SIMULATION pane represent a larger population of 500 parrots.
Select the TABLE tab. How many parrots of each genotype are in the initial population?
DD: 250 parrots Dd: 100 parrots dd: 150 parrots
2. Return to the DESCRIPTION tab. Click Begin, and then click Breed. What happens?
The birds reproduce, making eggs.
3. Click Hatch, and look on the TABLE tab. What are the parrot populations now?
DD: 178 Dd: 248 dd: 78
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Activity A:
Alleles and
genotypes
Get the Gizmo ready:
• On the DESCRIPTION tab, click Reset.
• Check that DD is 50% and dd is 30%.
Question: How will the proportion of genotypes and alleles change over time when
mating is random and no natural selection is occurring?
1. Predict: How do you expect the proportions of D and d alleles to change over time?
I expect there to be a change from homozygous making the overall population of the
heterozygous parrots increase (Dd).
2. Gather data: Run a generation in the Gizmo. After clicking Hatch, fill in the allele and
genotype percentages for generation 1. Repeat this process for 5 generations.
Initial
values
Generation
1 2 3 4 5
% D alleles 60 59 59.3 57.5 59.1 59.7
% d alleles 40 41 40.7 42.5 40.9 40.3
% of DD genotype 50 35.6 36.6 33.6 35.2 35.6
% of Dd genotype 20 46.8 45.4 47.8 47.8 48.2
% of dd genotype 30 17.6 18.0 18.6 17.0 16.2
3. Analyze: What patterns do you see in your data? The pattern is a decrease in the
percentage of D alleles, an overall increase in the percentage of d alleles, major decrease in
the percentage of the DD genotype, major increase in the percentage of the Dd genotype,
decrease in the percentage of the dd genotype.
4. Interpret: Select the ALLELE GRAPH tab. What does this graph show? This graph shows
the allele percentage throughout each of the generations, showing both the percentage of D
alleles and d alleles expressed in two different colors.
5. Interpret: Select the GENOTYPE GRAPH tab. What does this graph show? The genotype
graph shows the genotype percentage, giving all three types of possible genotypes DD
genotypes, Dd genotypes, and dd genotypes.
(Activity A continued on next page)
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Activity A (continued from previous page)
6. Gather data: On the DESCRIPTION tab, click Reset. generations. Record the allele and
genotype percentages for each generation in the table below.
Initial
values
Generation
1 2 3 4 5
% D alleles 85.7 84.6 83.9 82.8 83.9 85.3
% d alleles 14.3 15.4 16.1 17.2 16.1 14.7
% of DD genotype 84.0 71.8 70.2 69.2 70.0 73.2
% of Dd genotype 0.0 25.6 27.4 27.2 27.8 24.2
% of dd genotype 16.0 2.6 2.4 3.6 2.2 2.6
7. Analyze: Do the patterns you noticed in the first experiment appear in the second? Explain.
Yes the patterns does appear in the second one, there is are increases and increases after
every generation.
8. Draw conclusions: The Hardy-Weinberg principle states that the proportions of alleles and
genotypes in a population will remain stable as long as the following criteria are satisfied:
• Mating is random.
• There is no immigration or emigration.
• No natural or artificial selection is occurring.
• There is no mutation.
• The population is relatively large.
How well does the Hardy-Weinberg principle describe this population of parrots?
The Hardy-Weinberg principle describes this population pretty well, these are the topics in
which the parrots fall in: mating is random, there is no immigration or emigration, there is no
mutation, and the population is large.
9. Think and discuss: Would you say that this parrot population is evolving? Explain.
Yes, because there are changes in the alleles for heterozygous Dd, being an increase
throughout time, although, there are random decreases at certain points [Show Less]