Dictionary Definition
adapted adj : changed in order to improve or made
more fit for a particular purpose; "seeds precisely adapted to the
area"; "instructions altered to suit the children's different ages"
[syn: altered]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Verb
adapted- past of adapt
Extensive Definition
An adaptation is a positive characteristic of an
organism that has been
favored by natural
selection and increases the fitness of its possessor. Of
course, an adaptation must have been adaptive at some point in an
organism's evolutionary history, but such an organism's environment
and ecological
niche can change over time, leading to adaptations becoming
redundant or even a hindrance (maladaptations). Such
adaptations are termed vestigial.
Adaptation vs. acclimation
"Adaptation" is also sometimes used to refer to a
change in an individual organism over the course of its life that
makes it more suited to the environment. For an example, see
Adaptation
(eye). More specifically, however, such changes are referred to
as acclimation or acclimatization, the
former generally being a very short-term response such as
shivering, the latter being a longer-term change such as sun
tanning.
There is a great difference between selective
adaptation and acclimatization.
Adaptation occurs over many generations; it is a gradual process caused by
natural selection. Acclimatization generally occurs within a single
lifetime and copes with issues that are less threatening. For
example, if a human was to move to a higher altitude, respiration
and physical exertion would become a problem, but after spending
time in high altitude conditions one may acclimate or acclimatize
to the pressure and function and no longer notice the change. This
ability to acclimate is an adaptation, but not the acclimatization
itself. A counter-adaptation is an adaptation that has evolved due
to the selective pressure of another adaptation. This occurs in an
evolutionary
arms race, where a new adaptation giving one species an
advantage is countered by the appearance and spread of a new
feature that reduces the effectiveness of the first
adaptation.
Theories
The theory of adaptation was first put forth by Jean-Baptiste Lamarck. His theories are also referred to as the inheritance of acquired traits.Lamarck's theory was for a time held as an
alternative scientific explanation for evolutionary change observed
by Darwin in
the The
Origin of Species. The classic giraffe analogy offers the best
delineation between the two.
- According to Darwin, more long-necked giraffes reproduce than short-necked giraffes and as such giraffes today have long necks.
- According to Lamarck, it was giraffes stretching their necks in response to higher leaves that resulted in giraffes having long necks. (This trait being passed on to the next generation)
Although neither theory in its conception could
provide a complete description of the mechanism of transmission of
trait variation (i.e., particulate inheritance), many recognized
Darwin's theory immediately upon publication as a more complete and
empirically supported theory. Modern genetics have since
established the fundamental implausibility of Lamarckian
inheritance, due to the one-way nature of transcription. However,
see epigenetics and
Baldwinian
evolution for analogous processes in modern evolutionary.
See also
References
adapted in Arabic: تكيف
adapted in Bulgarian: Адаптация
adapted in Czech: Adaptace
adapted in Danish: Adaptation
adapted in German: Evolutionäre Anpassung
adapted in Estonian: Kohastumus
adapted in Spanish: Adaptación biológica
adapted in Esperanto: Adaptado
adapted in French: Adaptation (biologie)
adapted in Indonesian: Adaptasi
adapted in Italian: Adattamento
adapted in Hebrew: הסתגלות אבולוציונית
adapted in Lithuanian: Adaptacija
adapted in Hungarian: Adaptáció
adapted in Japanese: 適応
adapted in Norwegian Nynorsk: Tilpassing
adapted in Uzbek: Moslashish (biologiya)
adapted in Polish: Adaptacja (biologia)
adapted in Portuguese: Adaptação
(biologia)
adapted in Russian: Адаптация (биология)
adapted in Serbian: Адаптација
adapted in Serbo-Croatian: Adaptacija
adapted in Finnish: Adaptaatio
adapted in Tajik: Адаптатсия
adapted in Ukrainian: Адаптація (біологія)
adapted in Chinese: 適應
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
a propos, able, acclimated, acclimatized, accommodated, accommodated
to, according to, accustomed, ad rem, adapted
to, adjusted, adjusted
to, after, agreeable to,
agreeably to, answerable to, applicable, apposite, appropriate, apropos, apt, becoming, befitting, by, capable, case-hardened, checked
out, competent,
conditioned,
conformable,
conformable to, congruent with, consistent with, dovetailing, experienced, familiarized, felicitous, fit, fitted, fitting, geared, happy, hardened, in accordance with,
in agreement with, in compliance with, in conformity with, in
correspondence to, in harmony with, in keeping with, in line with,
in lock-step with, in obedience to, in step with, in uniformity
with, inured, just right,
likely, matched, meshing, naturalized, on the button,
opportune, orientated, oriented, pat, per, proficient, proper to,
qualified, relevant, right, run-in, seasonable, seasoned, sortable, suitable, suitable for,
suited, suiting, tailored, to the point, to the
purpose, trained,
uniform with, used to, well-fitted, well-qualified, well-suited,
wont, wonted