Island gigantism

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The large Haast's Eagle and Moa from New Zealand.
The large Haast's Eagle and Moa from New Zealand.

Island gigantism is a biological phenomenon where the size of animals isolated on an island increases dramatically over generations. It is a form of natural selection in which bigger size provides a survival advantage (see Bergmann's Rule). Large size in herbivores usually makes it harder to escape or hide from predators, but on islands, these are often lacking. Thus, island gigantism is not an evolutionary trend due to fundamentally new parameters determining fitness (as in island dwarfing), but rather the removal of constraints. With the arrival of humans and associated predators (dogs, cats, rats, pigs), many giant island endemics have become extinct. As opposed to island dwarfing, island gigantism is found in most major vertebrate groups and in invertebrates.

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[edit] Examples

Examples of island gigantism include:

[edit] Mammals

Many rodents grow larger on islands, whereas lagomorphs, carnivores, proboscideans and artiodactyls usually become smaller.

[edit] Birds

[edit] Reptiles

[edit] Insects

[edit] Flora

[edit] In popular culture

The movie King Kong provides a fictional (and exaggerated) example of Island gigantism. The animals, bugs and plants found on Skull Island all present monstrous sizes.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links