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  2. Mar 13, 2018 · By Susan King. Adaptation theory, also known as survival theory or survival of the fittest, is an organism's ability to adapt to changes in its environment and adjust accordingly over time. Adaptations occur over generations of a species with those traits that help an individual animal eat and mate most profusely being passed down from ...

  3. In biology, adaptation is defined a heritable behavioral, morphological, or physiological trait that has evolved through the process of natural selection, and maintains or increases the fitness of an organism under a given set of environmental conditions. This concept is central to ecology: the study of adaptation is the study of the ...

  4. Apr 5, 2017 · Grounding contemporary adaptation studies in a series of formative debates about what adaptation is, whether its orientation should be scientific or aesthetic, and whether it is most usefully approached inductively, through close analyses of specific adaptations, or deductively, through general theories of adaptation, the volume, not so much a m...

  5. Jun 7, 2006 · This book is a comprehensive study of adaptation as a mode of story-telling across media and genres. It examines the forms, adaptors, audiences, contexts, and processes of adaptation and challenges its critical dismissal.

    • Linda Hutcheon
    • New York
    • 2006
  6. Adaptation is the process by which a species becomes fitted to its environment through natural selection. Learn about the different meanings, examples, and challenges of adaptation in biology, and how it relates to evolution and ecology.

  7. Feb 1, 2005 · DNA sequence models of adaptation indicate that adaptation should involve mutations of relatively large fitness effects and that adaptation is characterized by a pattern of diminishing...

  8. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AdaptationAdaptation - Wikipedia

    Adaptation - Wikipedia. Contents. hide. (Top) History. General principles. What adaptation is not. Adaptedness and fitness. Types. Changes in habitat. Genetic change. Co-adaptation. Mimicry. Trade-offs. Examples. Shifts in function. Pre-adaptation. Co-option of existing traits: exaptation. Niche construction. Non-adaptive traits.

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