There are no examples of 'evolution' happening today. People look at a type of bird in England then a bird in Hawaii. It's the same type of bird, but they look different. Unfortunately, many people's answer is,"Evolution!". The truth is, the birds probably flew there, laid some eggs, and began to adapt to the weather. Naturally, you wear different clothes in Europe than in the tropics. Adaption, not evolution is the answer.
Answer:
There are numerous examples of present day evolution. The most common is the ability of microbes and bacteria to evolve to not be treatable by old antibiotics.
On a larger scale we have only recently (3,000 years or so) evolved the ability to digest milk when we are adults. This mutation occurred independently in both Africa and Europe.
Even more recently some populations in Africa are developing an increasing ability to resist AIDS. Again because the people with the changes to allow them to survive are surviving and passing on inheritable traits.
Punctuated equilibrium describes evolution happening in rapid bursts rather than gradually over time.
Evolution is the process by which species change over time in response to their environment, leading to the diversity of life we see on Earth today.
Convergent evolution is the process by which unrelated organisms evolve similar traits or structures in response to similar selection pressures in their environment. This results in analogous structures that serve similar functions despite not being derived from a common ancestor. Examples include the wings of bats and birds for flight, or the streamlined bodies of sharks and dolphins for efficient swimming.
Yes, evolution is an ongoing process that continues to happen today. It is driven by various factors such as natural selection, genetic mutations, and other mechanisms that lead to changes in species over time.
Non-examples of evolution could include changes that are not driven by genetic variations or natural selection, such as changes due to environmental factors like climate or human intervention. For instance, the growth of a callus on the skin in response to friction is not an example of evolution, as it does not involve changes in the genetic makeup of an organism's offspring over generations.
Evolution is always happening. Species are constantly changing to adapt to their surroundings. If evolution wasn't always happening, many different species would have died.
Yes.
I believe you are referring to microevolution and macroevolution. These theories both support evolution, but each in their own way. Microevolution is the most common belief today. This states that evolution is happening so rapidly that we don't even notice it. The mutations needed for evolution happen so quickly and on such a small scale that we never realize it's happening until afterwards. Macroevolution is exactly the opposite. This states that the mutations take so long that we never notice it. Both theories, in fact, were proposed because people were asking why, if evolution actually did take place, we could never see it happening.
Punctuated equilibrium describes evolution happening in rapid bursts rather than gradually over time.
Evolution is the change in allele frequency over time in a population of organisms. That has and is happening.
Evolution is routinely observed both in nature and in the lab. Even several speciation "events" are on record.
The theory predicts that evolution will happen and in certain ways. The observed evolution makes this prediction correct. It also defines evolution as happening, and as such is perfect evidence in support of it.
no
HIV and AIDS
there destroying mosques
Yes,for national mourning
benchod