Different Types of Biological Adaptation Throughout History

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In textbooks, adaptation, specifically biological adaptation, is usually defined as the method an organism adopts to better survive in its environment and reproduce. In scholarly papers, however, adaptation isn’t always as simple as that. An adaptation can be a structure that gives advantage to an organism over other similar organisms, or a behavior that helps the organism survive in its environment against predators. Sometimes even the adaptation itself wasn’t originally intended for its current biological role, or how it is used in the organism’s environment; this adaptation is sometimes called preadaptation (Kardong, 2006). Because it is difficult to identify which structures are adaptations and which are preadaptations, there is much controversy over the subject in the scholarly world. Often it is helpful to study these adaptations in ancient animals, but as most of these are extinct, scientists can only gather information from their close relatives, and even these aren’t conclusive enough.
For a structure to have a biological role in an organism, it must serve some purpose in the organism. For a biological adaptation to be considered as such, it must have some value in the organism in terms of survival against predators or production of offspring. While some structures are already adapted to their environment and biological roles, other structures can further adapt to changes in their environment through repeated stimuli. For example, bone in vertebrates is adapted to support and protect vertebrate organs, but it can also grow and remodel itself after mechanical wear and tear (Fratzl & Weinkamer, 2011). The continued, repetitive remodeling of bone improves it performance and further enforces and enhances its biological role. ...

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...mparative Anatomy, Function, Evolution (4th ed.). New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.
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