The rule was first formulated by van Valen in 1973[3][4] based on the study by mammalogist J. Bristol Foster in 1964.[5][6] In it, Foster compared 116 island species to their mainland varieties. Foster proposed that certain island creatures evolved larger body size (insular gigantism) while others became smaller (insular dwarfism). Foster proposed the simple explanation that smaller creatures get larger when predation pressure is relaxed because of the absence of some of the predators of the mainland, and larger creatures become smaller when food resources are limited because of land area constraints.[7]
Recent literature has also applied the island rule to plants.[9]
There are some cases that do not neatly fit the rule; for example, artiodactyls have on several islands evolved into both dwarf and giant forms.[10][11]
The Island Rule is a contested topic in evolutionary biology. Some argue that, since body size is a trait that is affected by multiple factors, and not just by organisms moving to an island, genetic variations across all populations could also cause the body mass differences between mainland and island populations.[12]
^Mazza, P.P.A.; Rossi, M.A.; Agostini, S. (2015). "Hoplitomerycidæ (Late Miocene, Italy), an Example of Giantism in Insular Ruminants". Journal of Mammalian Evolution. 22 (2): 271–77. doi:10.1007/s10914-014-9277-2. S2CID16437411.