Exaptations include the co-option of
feathers, which initially evolved for heat regulation, for display, and later for use in bird flight. Another example is the lungs of many
basal fish, which evolved into the lungs of terrestrial vertebrates but also underwent exaptation to become the
gas bladder, a buoyancy control organ, in derived fish. A third is the
repurposing of two of the three bones in the amniote jaw to become the malleus and incus of the mammalian ear, leaving the mammalian jaw with just one hinge.
Arthropods provide the earliest identifiable fossils of land animals, from about in the Late
Silurian, and terrestrial tracks from about appear to have been made by arthropods. Arthropods were well pre-adapted to colonize land, because their existing jointed
exoskeletons provided support against gravity and mechanical components that could interact to provide levers, columns and other means of locomotion that did not depend on submergence in water.
Metabolism can be considered an important part of exaptation. As one of the oldest biological systems and being central to life on the Earth, studies have shown that metabolism may be able to use exaptation in order to increase fitness, given some new set of conditions or environment. Studies have shown that up to 44 carbon sources are viable for metabolism to successfully take place and that any one adaptation in these specific metabolic systems is due to multiple exaptations. Taking this perspective, exaptations are important in the origination of adaptations in general. A recent example comes from
Richard Lenski's
E. coli long-term evolution experiment, in which aerobic growth on
citrate arose in one of twelve populations after 31,000 generations of evolution. Genomic analysis by
Blount and colleagues showed that this novel trait was due to a
gene duplication that caused a citrate
transporter that is normally expressed only under anoxic conditions to be expressed under
oxic conditions, thus exapting it for aerobic use. Gould and
Brosius took the concept of exaptation to the genetic level. It is possible to look at a
retroposon, originally thought to be simply junk DNA, and deduce that it may have gained a new function to be termed as an exaptation. Given an emergency situation in the past, a species may have co-opted junk DNA for a useful purpose. This may have occurred with
mammalian ancestors when confronted with the
Permian–Triassic extinction event about 250 million years ago and substantial increase in the level of oxygen in Earth's atmosphere. More than 100
loci have been found to be
conserved only among mammalian genomes and are thought to have essential roles in the generation of features such as the
placenta,
diaphragm,
mammary glands,
neocortex, and auditory ossicles. It is believed that as a result of exaptation, or making previously "useless" DNA into DNA that could be used in order to increase survival chance, mammals were able to generate new brain structures as well as behavior to better survive the mass extinction and adapt to new environments. Similarly,
viruses and their components have been repeatedly exapted for host functions. The functions of exapted viruses typically involve either defense from other viruses or cellular competitors or transfer of nucleic acids between cells, or storage functions.
Koonin and Krupovic suggested that virus exaptation can reach different depths, from recruitment of a fully functional virus to exploitation of defective, partially degraded viruses, to utilization of individual virus proteins. ==Adaptation and exaptation cycle==