The Provenance–Prevalence Distinction DOI defines two analytically separate stages in the evolutionary emergence of a basic adaptive informational task DOI within the Five Task Model DOI. Provenance denotes the early, scattered appearance of a task capacity in specific lineages, where the capacity is present but not yet ecologically indispensable. Prevalence denotes the stage at which a task becomes load-bearing infrastructure across many species within one or more clades, so widely embedded in survival strategies, reproductive systems, and ecological interactions that its removal would destabilize ecosystems rather than merely eliminate individual lineages. The distinction is critical for situating the five basic adaptive informational tasks within evolutionary time without requiring precise fossil evidence or lineage-specific reconstruction. Because informational tasks do not fossilize directly, the Five Task Model uses prevalence as the point at which a task becomes architecturally indispensable within the biosphere, while provenance marks its earlier, more scattered evolutionary appearance. The provenance–prevalence distinction also clarifies how the Five Task Model connects its comparative dataset of 1,530 species DOI to broader claims about the architecture of adaptive cognition. The dataset records observable patterns of behavior change DOI, while prevalence identifies the point at which a task becomes load-bearing for the regulation of Energy, Safety, and Reproduction (ESR) DOI across ecological systems.
Sergei A. Frolov (Sat,) studied this question.