There are five basic Hardy-Weinberg assumptions:
1. Random Mating -
2. No natural selection - all members of the parental generation survived and contributed equal numbers of gametes to the gene pool, no matter the genotype
3. No genetic drift (random allele frequency changes) - the population is infinitely large.
4. No gene flow - no new alleles were added by immigration or lost through emigration (no migration)
5. No mutation - There must be mutation equilibrium.
Alcohol is a solvent and it basically dissolves anything. A lead is spongy and full of holes. When the leaf is mixed with alcohol, the alcohol affects the leaves. The alcohol melts the pigments of the leaf, chlorophyll, which is the green part. This will turn the alcohol green
oak tree DNA is much longer than that in human and the number of chromosomes also differ
The answer to this question would be false.
The solute is a substance that was dissolved by the solvent. The amount of solute that can be dissolved is called solubility. The amount of solute mostly small and if it solubility too high it will be precipitated.
There are no rules state that solute should always be the greatest amount.
The smaller a population, the greater the potential effect of genetic drift on gene frequencies.
Genetic drift is an evolutionary term which refers to the random changes in a population's allele frequencies. These changes happen by chance due to the random selection of alleles from the genetic pool in each generation. Genetic drift can lead to either loss of some alleles or the fixation of others (100% frequency). The effect of genetic drift is stronger in smaller populations. This is because, the larger the population, the larger the sample size and the slower the result of genetic drift.