Population genetics is the study of genetic variation within species. The key concepts are:
1) The Hardy-Weinberg principle states that allele and genotype frequencies in a population will remain constant from generation to generation if mating is random and other evolutionary forces are absent.
2) Founder effects occur when new populations are established by a small number of individuals, resulting in a loss of genetic variation compared to the original population.
3) Factors like non-random mating, genetic drift, migration, mutation, and natural selection can cause changes in allele frequencies over time, known as microevolution.