The Hardy-Weinberg principle disproved the idea that allele frequencies in a population remain constant over time without the influence of evolutionary forces. It established that, in a large, randomly mating population with no mutations, migration, or selection, allele frequencies will remain stable generation after generation. This principle provided a mathematical framework for understanding how evolutionary processes can lead to changes in genetic variation within populations.
Copyright © 2026 eLLeNow.com All Rights Reserved.