Adaptation and Survival (2024)

Any number of characteristics can vary among individuals of a given species— some may be larger, hairier, fight off infections better, or have smaller ears. These characteristics are largely determined by their genes, which are passed down from their parents and subsequently passed down to their own offspring. Some of these characteristics, or traits, provide competitive advantages like speed, strength, or attractiveness. If those traits are particularly helpful, individuals with those traits will produce more offspring than those without. Over generations, the number of individuals with that advantageous trait, or adaptation, will increase until it becomes a general attribute of the

species

.

Structural and Behavioral Adaptations

An adaptation can be structural, meaning it is a physical part of the organism. An

adaptation

can also be behavioral, affecting the way an organism responds to its environment.

An example of astructural

adaptation

is the way some plants have

adapted

to life in dry, hot deserts. Plants calledsucculents have

adapted

to thisclimateby storing water in their short, thick stems and leaves.

Seasonal migrationis an example of a

behavioral

adaptation

. Gray whales (Eschrichtius robustus) migrate thousands of kilometers every year as they swim from the cold Arctic Ocean in summer to the warm waters off the coast of Mexico to winter. Grey whale calves are born in the warm southern water, and then travel in groups called pods to thenutrient-rich waters of the

Arctic

.

Adaptations

that develop in response to one challenge sometimes help with or become co-opted for another. Feathers were probably first

adaptations

for tactile sense or regulating temperature. Later, feathers became longer and stiffer, allowing for gliding and then for flight. Such traits are called exaptations.

Some traits, on the other hand, lose their function when other

adaptations

become more important or when the

environment

changes. Evidence of these traits remain in a vestigial form— reduced or functionless. Whales and dolphins have

vestigial

leg bones, the remains of an

adaptation

(legs) that their ancestors used to walk.

Habitat

Adaptations

often develop in response to a change in the organisms’

habitat

.

A famous example of an animal

adapting

to a change in its

environment

is England's peppered moth (Biston betularia). Prior to the 19th century, the most common type of thismothwas cream-colored with darker spots. Few peppered moths were gray or black.

As theIndustrial Revolutionchanged the

environment

, the appearance of the peppered

moth

changed. The darker-colored

moths

, which were rare, began tothrivein theurbanatmosphere. Theirsooty color blended in with the trees, which were stained byindustrialpollution. Birds couldn’t see the dark

moths

as well, so they ate the cream-colored

moths

instead. The cream-colored

moths

began to make a comeback after the United Kingdom passed laws that limitedair

pollution

.

Speciation

Sometimes, an

adaptation

or set of

adaptations

develops that splits one

species

into two. This process is known as

speciation

.

Marsupials in Oceania are an example ofadaptive radiation, a type of

speciation

in which

species

develop to fill a variety of empty ecological niches.

Marsupials

, mammals that carry theirdeveloping youngin pouches after a short pregnancy, arrived in

Oceania

before the land split from Asia.Placental mammals, animals that carry their

young

to term in the

mother

’swomb, came todominateevery other continent, but not

Oceania

. Koalas (Phascolarctos cinereus), for instance,

adapted

to feed oneucalyptustrees, which are native to Australia. TheextinctTasmanian tiger (Thylacinus cynocephalus) was acarnivorous

marsupial

and

adapted

to the

niche

filled bybig cats, like tigers, on other

continents

.

Thecichlidfish found in many of Africa’s lakes exhibit another type of

speciation

,sympatric speciation.

Sympatric

speciation

is the opposite of physical isolation. It happens when

species

share the same

habitat

.

Adaptations

have allowed hundreds of varieties of

cichlids

to live in Lake Malawi. Each

species

of

cichlid

has aunique, specializeddiet: One type of

cichlid

may eat only insects, another may eat onlyalgae, another may feed only on other fish.

Coadaptation

Organisms sometimes

adapt

with and to other organisms. This is called

co

adaptation

. Certain flowers produce nectar to appeal to hummingbirds.

Hummingbirds

, in turn, have

adapted

long, thin beaks toextractthe nectar from certain flowers. When a

hummingbird

goes to feed, it inadvertently picks up pollen from the anthers of the flowers, which is deposited on the stigma of the next flowers it visits. In this relationship, the

hummingbird

gets food, while the plant’s

pollen

isdistributed. The

co

adaptation

is beneficial to both organisms.

Mimicry is another type of

co

adaptation

. In mimicry, one organism has

adapted

toresembleanother. The harmless king snake (sometimes called a milk snake) has

adapted

a color pattern that

resembles

the deadly coral snake. This mimicry keeps predators away from the king snake.

The mimic octopus (Thaumoctopus mimicus) has behavioral as well as structural

adaptations

. This

species

of octopus can copy the look and movements of other animals, such as sea snakes, flatfish, jellyfish, and shrimp.

Co

adaptation

can also limit an organism’s ability to

adapt

to new changes in their

habitat

. This can lead toco-extinction. In southern England, the large blue butterfly

adapted

to eat red ants. When humandevelopmentreduced the red ants’

habitat

, the local

extinction

of the red ant led to the local

extinction

of the large blue butterfly.

Adaptation and Survival (2024)
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