This document discusses factors involved in macroevolution, including adaptive radiation and orthogenesis. It provides examples of adaptive radiation in Darwin's finches in the Galapagos Islands, where 14 species evolved from a common ancestor to fill different ecological niches. Orthogenesis is the assumption that evolutionary changes occur in a straight line, such as the parallel reduction of side toes in unrelated artiodactyl genera. Allometry also plays a role, describing the relationship between organism and part size and how diversity arises from changes in relative part sizes within a common body plan.