Answer:
isolation is a significant factor in adaptation and speciation
Step-by-step explanation:
In the theory of evolution by natural selection proposed by Darwin, adaptation refers to the adjustment of organisms to their environments in order to increase their chances of survival in that environment. In the Galapagos Islands, Darwin observed that finches had different types of beaks adapted to the type of food they ate. From this observation, Darwin proposed that finches evolved to eat different food sources. In this case, the islands lead to an adjustment (evolutionary) process by which geographically isolated individuals accumulate genetic differences in order to adapt them to the environmental conditions in the islands, which then may also prevent breeding between individuals from different islands when they are reunited (i.e., it may also lead to speciation).