Adaptive radiation occurs when a single ancestral species diversifies rapidly into several new species with distinct ecological niches. This can happen when a group enters a new environment with unoccupied niches. Examples include Darwin's finches in the Galapagos, which diversified beak shapes to exploit different food sources, and mammals, which radiated into arboreal, aquatic, fossorial and other forms from a common ancestor. Adaptive radiation allows organisms to fill ecological space and drives evolutionary diversification.