'Adaptive radiation' describes the rapid
speciation of a single or a few
species to fill many
ecological niches. This is an
evolutionary process driven by
natural selection, successful and novel adaptation, and sometimes by
mutation (heritable/genetic variation).
Causes of adaptive radiation
Opportunity
Isolated
ecosystems, such as
archipelagos and
mountain areas, can be colonized by a species which, upon establishing itself, undergoes rapid
divergent evolution.
Monotremes and
marsupials are examples of geographic isolation. Monotremes evolved before the evolution of placental mammals, and they are found today only in
Australia, an island. Marsupials, which also evolved before the appearance of placental mammals are also common in Australia. In Australia, marsupials evolved to fill many ecological niches that placental mammals fill on other
continents.
Richard Leakey (see below) wrote, "Biologists who have studied the fossil record know that when a new species evolves with a novel adaptation, there is often a burgeoning of descendent species over the next few million years expressing various themes on that initial adaptation - a burgeoning known as 'adaptive radiation'. The Cambridge University anthropologist
Robert Foley has calculated that if the evolutionary history of the bipedal apes followed the usual pattern of adaptive radiation, at least sixteen species should have existed between the group's origin 7 million years ago and today."
Extinction
Adaptive radiation can also occur after
mass extinctions. The best example of this is after the
Permian-Triassic extinction event, where
biodiversity increased massively in the
Triassic. The end of the
Ediacaran and the beginnings of
multicellular life lead to adaptive radiations and the genesis of new phyla in the
Cambrian period.
Adaptive radiation in popular culture
In
science fiction sometimes adaptive radiation of
humans is imagined. This often makes for interesting multi-species
worlds.
References
★ Wilson, E. et al. ''Life on Earth,'' by Wilson,E.; Eisner,T.; Briggs,W.; Dickerson,R.; Metzenberg,R.; O'brien,R.; Susman,M.; Boggs,W.; (Sinauer Associates, Inc., Publishers, Stamford, Connecticut), c 1974. Chapters: ''The Multiplication of Species; Biogeography,'' pp 824-877. 40 Graphs, w species pictures, also Tables, Photos, etc. Includes
Galápagos Islands,
Hawaii, and
Australia subcontinent, (plus
St. Helena Island, etc.).
★ Leakey,Richard. ''The Origin of Humankind'' - on adaptive radiation in biology and human evolution, pp. 28-32, 1994, Orion Publishing.