Of course. Every living thing has a common ancestor. Humans and flies are both in the animalia kingdom.
that they share a common ancestor
Humans and cats share about 90% of their DNA. The genetic similarities are evident in various aspects, such as the structure and function of certain genes controlling traits like metabolism and immune response.
Cats and dogs have a more recent common ancestor in evolutionary history compared to cats and hamsters. This means that they have had less time for genetic differences to accumulate, resulting in more similar DNA between cats and dogs than cats and hamsters.
Daphnia, commonly known as water fleas, are crustaceans and belong to a different branch of the animal kingdom compared to mammals like cats and dogs. While both daphnia and mammals share a common ancestor, the evolutionary divergence between them occurred much earlier. Therefore, daphnia are not as closely related to humans as cats and dogs are, which share a more recent common ancestor within the mammalian lineage.
Isn't a male meerkat called a dog since the meerkat shares a common ancestor with the domestic dogs and the wild cats? Dogs, cats, bears, hyenas and mongooses, including the meerkat share a common ancestor: the extinct miacis.
Cats and humans share similar X and Y chromosomes, in fact the two species shared a common ancestor about 90 million years ago and share 90% of (homologous) genes with humans
A bobcat is a specie of lynx, which is a member of the family Felidae or cat family.
Virtually everything about them, from their morphology to their embryological development to their behaviour to their genomes.
Yes, and they share a significant amount of identical DNA even though their common ancestor is back in the precambrian.
Examples of structures in different organisms that share a common ancestry include the pentadactyl limb in vertebrates (including humans, cats, bats, and whales) and the similar bone structure seen in bird wings, bat wings, and pterosaur wings due to a common ancestor from which they evolved. Another example is the vertebrate eye structure found in humans, birds, and octopuses, which have evolved independently yet share common features due to their shared ancestry.
No, humans are not "part monkey."lol: 'you humans'- somebody's cat is on wikianswers.No, we humans are not part monkey. I think you are referring to the theory of evolution which states that humans, apes and monkeys (as well as all life (including you cats)) have a common ancestor.
Cats did not evolve from dinosaurs. Cats evolved from a common ancestor of modern carnivores, which lived after the extinction of dinosaurs.