When you team 2 or more adapters you are creating a VLAN (virtual LAN). You are basically telling the OS to listen on all adapters as though they were one. This teaming causes your system to have a faster response time via load balancing, in most cases fault tolerance (based on how smart the teaming software is) which takes over if one of your adapters dies or a network config gets broken.
Once the team is created, one of the easiest is the broadcom software and it even allows for different adapters, your other REAL adapters should not be edited directly. The configuration on the virtal adapter is the ip address you want the world or other servers/workstations to see. So if you are using this machine as a server, everything must be updated to reflect this new ip address. DNS, DHCP scopes, WINS, etc.