No, humans did not evolve from reptiles. Both humans and reptiles share a common ancestor from millions of years ago, but they evolved along separate paths.
Yes, reptiles can carry bacteria such as Salmonella which can be transmitted to humans through contact with the reptile's feces or environment. Proper hygiene, including hand-washing after handling reptiles, can help reduce the risk of bacterial transmission.
Yes, humans evolved from ancestors who had tails.
Bacteria would evolve faster than humans due to their shorter generation times and larger population sizes, allowing for quicker adaptation to environmental changes and mutations to occur. Humans have longer generation times and smaller population sizes, slowing down the rate of evolution.
Turtles (reptiles) are close to humans and frogs (amphibians) http://abacus.gene.ucl.ac.uk/will/files/TreeOfLife.pdf
All organisms, including humans, have evolved from ancestral organisms and continue to evolve, although at a rate too slow to witness during one lifetime.
They ARE reptiles.
no, the reptiles evolved from fish
reptiles
no
No. Dinosaurs evolved from reptiles. Birds evolved from dinosaurs.
No. Gallifreyans were kind of always there. They did not evolve from anything.
It is believed that snakes evolved from lizards. Lizards are an existing group of reptiles, of course, so did not 'evolve into' anything else--they are still here. While mammals and birds evolved from reptiles, they did not evolve from lizards.
because birds and reptiles are reptiles and humans are mamals which makes use different! And birds are oviparous
Frogs are Amphibians, not humans or reptiles.
evolution - apes continued to evolve as well. We came from all mamals, reptiles etc... each species continued to evolve into its own lines. All dogs came from the selective breeding from wolves, and wolves continue to exist.
A proto-mammal called the synapsid.
Jurassic time period