T
Techno2000
Guest
Yes…Can you show any animal today that is in the process of changing into something new ?reject it. Is there any evidence you would accept?
Yes…Can you show any animal today that is in the process of changing into something new ?reject it. Is there any evidence you would accept?
What would we have to show you that would count?Can you show any animal today that is in the process of changing into something new ?
According to our best estimate right now, probably some kind of wasp:Before a Bee, was a Bee… what was it ?
Species changes over time to the point where that population is distinct and can no longer interbreed with the “parent” population. In order for one population to diverge enough from another to become a new species.Define “changing into something new.”
How about {i}Cerion? Not bones, but shells, and a good series of shells gradually changing from one species to another to another. See Evolution and speciation in the Bahamian land snail Cerion.I’m talking about one animal slowly changing into some new animal, and leaving a trail of bones to show every stage of its progression, not an artist’s rendering of what that might look like. For every animal that has bones today there should be a trail of bones to show how it got that way.
Didn’t we already have that with the Galapagos finches that put Darwin on the scent in the first place?Species changes over time to the point where that population is distinct and can no longer interbreed with the “parent” population. In order for one population to diverge enough from another to become a new species.
My God help us.That’s called procreation,not evolution… can you answer the Question or not ?
And what was it before it was wasp ?According to our best estimate right now, probably some kind of wasp:
scientificamerican.com/article/the-beguiling-history-of-bees-excerpt/
Obviously, any individual bee has been a bee its whole life. But the first bees descended from specialized pollen-gathering wasps.
Your question is answered, and now you are baiting because you can’t accept the answer.And what was it before it was wasp ?
Best model is a snakefly-like creature, to which it seems to share a common ancestor.And what was it before it was wasp ?
? Not bones, but shells, and a good series of shells gradually changing from one species to another to another. See Evolution and speciation in the Bahamian land snail Cerion.How about {i}Cerion
They are still finches and they will produce more finches, and nothing will change.Didn’t we already have that with the Galapagos finches that put Darwin on the scent in the first place?
And you show snakeflies becoming wasp, and wasp becoming bees…How ?To be clear it’s not as if it’s just standard that snakeflies become wasps and wasps become bees. Isolated populations underwent different pressures and established different niches and favored certain traits. If a group has a niche and no pressures that favor different traits and the population is significantly large, the traits it has will probably remain relatively constant.
The smallest genetic change I am aware of is a change of three genes which resulted in speciation of two species of Chrysopa: *C. carnea/]i and C. downesi. See Tauber and Tauber (1977) Sympatric Speciation Based on Allelic Changes at Three Loci: Evidence from Natural Populations in Two Habitats.Species changes over time to the point where that population is distinct and can no longer interbreed with the “parent” population. In order for one population to diverge enough from another to become a new species.
Fossil record, geological record, DNA analysis, analyzing shared traits unique to certain groups of living things.And you show snakeflies becoming wasp, and wasp becoming bees…How ?
We are talking about speciation. They are different species of snail, so that is speciation.But they are still snails.