Cod fish have two forms of hemoglobin determined by alleles
Cod fish have two forms of hemoglobin determined by alleles ‘m’ and ‘r’ at one locus. A sample of cod taken off the Norwegian coast had the following frequencies of the three genotypes:
mm
mr
rr
Total
130
763
1698
2591
A1. What are the allelic frequencies of ‘m’ and ‘r’?
A2. Are these frequencies compatible with the sample having been drawn from a random-breeding population?
| mm | mr | rr | Total |
| 130 | 763 | 1698 | 2591 |
Solution
1. The allelic frequency for m, (Freq m) = [130 + 0.5(763)] / 2591 = 0.1974
The allelic frequency for r, (Freq r) = [1698 + 0.5(763) ] / 2591 = 0.8023
2. If drawn from a random-breeding population the genotype would be in Hardy-Weinberg proportions and would be:
F(mm)= p2 = 0.1974= 0.0390, F (mr) = 2pq = 2 (0.1974)(0.8026) = 0.3169 and F(rr)= q2 = 0.8026 = 0.6442
And the expected number of individuals in each group would be :
Number (mm)= (0.0390)(2591)= 101
Number (mr)= (0.3169)(2591)= 821
Number(rr)= (0.6442)(2591)= 1669
The actual numbers found in each group were 130, 763 and 1698. There are considerably fewer heterozygotes and more homozygotes than would occur with Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.
