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Adaptation An adaptation is a feature that is common in a population because it provides some improved function. Adaptations are well fitted to their function and are produced by natural selection. Adaptations can take many forms: a behavior that allows better evasion of predators, a protein that functions better at body temperature, or an anatomical feature that allows the organism to access a valuable new resource—all of these might be adaptations. Many of the things that impress us most in nature are thought to be adaptations. Mimicry of leaves by insects is an adaptation for evading predators. This example is a katydid from Costa Rica. The creosote bush is a desert-dwelling plant that produces toxins that prevent other plants from growing nearby, thus reducing competition for nutrients and water. Echolocation in bats is an adaptation for catching insects. So what’s not an adaptation? The answer: a lot of things. One example is vestigial structures. A vestigial structure is a feature that was an adaptation for the organism’s ancestor, but that evolved to be non-functional because the organism’s environment changed. Fish species that live in completely dark caves have vestigial, non-functional eyes. When their sighted ancestors ended up living in caves, there was no longer any natural selection that maintained the function of the fishes’ eyes. So, fish with better sight no longer outcompeted fish with worse sight. Today, these fish still have eyes—but they are not functional and are not an adaptation; they are just the by-products of the fishes’ evolutionary history. Not Everything is an Adaptation Although living things sport some amazing adaptations, many characteristics of species are not adaptations at all. It’s tempting to look for adaptive explanations for everything, from the shape of a flower petal, to the way your dog turns in a circle before it lies down to sleep, to your neighbor’s strawberry blond hair. We could make up a “just so” story, but there are other explanations to consider: 1. The result of history. Why does the base sequence GGC code for the amino acid glycine in a protein, as opposed to some other amino acid? Because that’s the way it happened to start out—and that’s the way we inherited it from our common ancestor. There is nothing special about the relationship between GGC and glycine. It’s just a historical accident that stuck around. 2. Just a by-product. Why is blood red? It’s a by-product of the chemistry of blood, which causes it to reflect red light. The chemistry of blood may be an adaptation, but blood’s redness is not itself an adaptation. 3. An outdated adaptation. It might be an adaptation for a past environment and not the current one. For example, scientists have hypothesized that the large, hard-shelled fruit of the calabash tree is actually an adaptation for seed distribution by large mammals such as the gomphothere1. But these early relatives of elephants went extinct over 10,000 years ago! If the hypothesis is correct, these fruit characteristics can no longer be considered adaptations for seed distribution. An artist’s representation of a gomphothere (extinct). A modern-day calabash fruit. 4. The result of genetic drift. Some biologists can get quite passionate about how much genetic variation is adaptive and is maintained by natural selection and how much is neutral and is maintained by genetic drift. Neutral Theory: The relative importance of drift and selection It might seem like everywhere we look, we see evidence of natural selection: organisms seem to be pretty well adapted to their environments. But the neutral theory of molecular evolution suggests that most of the genetic variation in populations is the result of mutation and genetic drift and not selection. Basically, the theory suggests that if a population carries several different versions of a gene, odds are that each of those versions is equally good at performing its job—in other words, that variation is neutral: whether you carry gene version A or gene version B does not affect your fitness. The neutral theory is easily misinterpreted. It does NOT suggest: That organisms are not adapted to their environments That all morphological variation is neutral That ALL genetic variation is neutral That natural selection is unimportant in shaping genomes The main point of the neutral theory is simply that when we see several versions of a gene in a population, it is likely that their frequencies are simply drifting around. The data supporting and refuting the neutral theory are complicated. Figuring out how widely the neutral theory applies is still the topic of much research. Exaptations An “exaptation” is just one example of a characteristic that evolved, but that isn’t considered an adaptation. Stephen Gould and Elizabeth Vrba1 proposed vocabulary to let biologists talk about features that are and are not adaptations: Adaptation—a feature produced by natural selection for its current function (such as echolocation in bats, right). Exaptation—a feature that performs a function but that was not produced by natural selection for its current use. Perhaps the feature was produced by natural selection for a function other than the one it currently performs and was then coopted for its current function. For example, feathers might have originally arisen in the context of selection for insulation, and only later were they co-opted for flight. In this case, the general form of feathers is an adaptation for insulation and an exaptation for flight. Qualifying as an Adaptation An adaptation is a feature produced by natural selection for its current function. Based on this definition we can make specific predictions (“If X is an adaptation for a particular function, then we’d predict that...”) and see if our predictions match our observations. As an example, we’ll consider the hypothesis: feathers are an adaptation for bird flight. Is the evidence consistent with this hypothesis? Heritable If it has been shaped by natural selection, it must be genetically encoded—since natural selection cannot act on traits that don’t get passed on to offspring. Are feathers heritable? Yes. Baby birds grow up to have feathers like those of their parents. Functional If it has been shaped by natural selection for a particular task, the trait must actually perform that task. Do feathers function to enable flight? In the case of bird flight, the answer is fairly obvious. Birds with feathers are able to fly and birds without feathers would not be able to. Adaptive If it has been shaped by natural selection, it must increase the fitness of the organisms that have it—since natural selection only increases the frequency of traits that increase fitness. Are birds more fit with feathers than without? Birds without feathers aren’t going to leave as many offspring as those with feathers. We could do experiments to test each of these criteria of adaptation. So far so good—the feature could have been shaped by natural selection. But we also have to look at historical questions about what was going on when it arose. Did feathers arise in the context of natural selection for flight? Current Function Did the trait arise when the current function arose? Did feathers arise when flying arose? The answer to this is probably no. The closest fossil relatives of birds, two-legged dinosaurs called theropods, appear to have sported feathers but could not fly. So perhaps the basic form of feathers is not an adaptation for flight even though it certainly serves that function now. It may be an exaptation for flight and an adaptation for some other function. Answering questions like these, has led biologists to look for alternate scenarios for the initial evolution of feathers. This last question emphasizes the importance of understanding organisms’ history through fossils such as Archaeopteryx and reconstructed phylogenies. It is not enough to know that the feature is functional right now. We want to know what was happening when it first evolved, which often involves reconstructing the phylogeny of the organisms we are interested in and determining the likely ancestral states of the characters.