Yes.
The Gible, Gabite, or Garchomp has to be a female with a Ditto or with its same Egg Group in the Daycare. Its Egg Group is Monster and Dragon.
yes as long as they are in the same evolution family.
Dratini evolves at level 30 same as Larvitar, Bagon, and gible
Yes, they will always be the same species unless they evolution or something like that like the family of the Cats, tigers etc. They had always been the same.
No,these are only dragons (and dragonite and altaria are the same types); you should have a team with different types. i'd stick with garchomp or dragonite though.
Cubone alng with its evolution of Marowak are in the same Monster Egg Group along with Lickitung and its evolution of Lickilicky, Kangaskhan, Snorlax, Larvitar and its evolutions, Aron and its evolutions, Cranidos, Rampardos, Shieldon and its evolution of Bastiodon, Amaura, Aurorus, Bergmite, Avalugg, the Kanto Starters and their evolutions, Nidoran and its evolutions, Slowpoke and its evolutions, Rhyhorn and its evolutions, Lapras, Chikorita and its evolutions, Totodile and its evolutions, Mareep and its evolutions, Treecko and its evolutions, Mudip and Whismur and their evolutions, Tropius, Turtwig and Gible and their evolutions, Snover, Abomasnow, Axew and its evolutions, Druddigon, Helioptile, Heliolisk, Tyrunt and Tyrantrum.
Micro-evolution is not only a part of macro-evolution, it is the same mechanism as macro-evolution. Macro-evolution includes speciation, as a result of continuing micro-evolution.
I tested it on my platinum game and it took me 11,475 steps to hatch my gible egg i don't know if its the same for dimond or pearl.
Yes, because of the family of the ancestors of the cat, as in evolution between the cats, and then the lion and the tiger. So yes, the lion and the tiger are related in some kind of evolution.
No. Evolution explains how and why organisms change over time. It makes no difference to evolution how organisms are generated.
No, there are no other theories but the theory of evolution by natural selection that explain so much about evolution.
No. Evolution is the change in allele ( different molecular forms of the same gene ) frequency over time in a population of organisms. No equilibrium there.