natural selection right i think so
tortiose and finch.(Galapagos Islands
Penguins are found mainly in the Southern Hemisphere, with species inhabiting regions such as Antarctica, South America, Africa, Australia, and New Zealand. They are well-adapted to cold climates and are often found in coastal areas or on islands.
Penguins actually mostly live in the southern hemisphere, with only one species, the Galapagos penguin, found in the northern hemisphere. The majority of penguin species are found in Antarctica, South Africa, Australia, and South America.
Large tree-finches eat mostly insects and caterpillars, and will also eat fruit in the dry season. Part of the group of species called "Darwin's finches", the large tree-finch (Camarhynchus psittacula) is one of the species of finch that has evolved on the Galapagos Islands of Ecuador and exists nowhere else.
In Scotland, mostly highlands and islands. I often see a few on my walks.
The Galapagos Islands are mostly populated by Ecuadorians who are legal permanent residents of Galapagos. There are also temporary residents of the islands, who may be international or national volunteers, workers, or tourists accompanying a temporary resident.
The Galapagos Penguin is a penguin endemic to the Galapagos Islands.the other species of which occur mostly on the coasts of mainland South America, and Africa.
The Galapagos have no goods export. People doesn't live there. The galapagos is a unique place of little Islands with the most rare nature and animals on the planet. And is the habitat of too important species around the world. For example is the only place that you can find a marine iguana; but has too many active Volcanos in some of the youngest Islands that people can't live there. National geographic has a great documentary of The Galapagos. 2-24-2010 People do indeed live on the Galapagos, mostly for the tourist trade, and to provide goods and services to each other. If you go to GoogleEarth.com and go to the Galapagos, you can explore the islands via satellite photos. You can actually see a town.
The Galapagos have no goods export. People doesn't live there. The galapagos is a unique place of little Islands with the most rare nature and animals on the planet. And is the habitat of too important species around the world. For example is the only place that you can find a marine iguana; but has too many active Volcanos in some of the youngest Islands that people can't live there. National geographic has a great documentary of The Galapagos. 2-24-2010 People do indeed live on the Galapagos, mostly for the tourist trade, and to provide goods and services to each other. If you go to GoogleEarth.com and go to the Galapagos, you can explore the islands via satellite photos. You can actually see a town.
The Galapagos Islands are part of Chile, and mostly uninhabited--they are a national park. There are towns on two of the islands whose main industry is tourism. Although not as rich as western countries, the incomes on these islands are often higher than on the mainland, and many people have moved here for that reason. The government limits immigration, because of the delicate ecological balance it is trying to maintain on the islands.
tortiose and finch.(Galapagos Islands
According to Wikipedia, it is located in the Atlantic Ocean southeast of the United States; north of Cuba, Hispaniola (Dominican Republic & Haiti) and the Caribbean Sea; and northwest of the Turks and Caicos Islands.
When Darwin began his research, he was a Creationist, the firmly established theory of life at the time. Fatefully, a trip to the Galapagos Islands to catalog species resulted in a 20 year study after he found he had difficulty in classifying Galapagos tortoises and other species. As a result of his studies, he became an evolutionist, a change that began with his trip to the Galapagos Islands.
Penguins are found mainly in the Southern Hemisphere, with species inhabiting regions such as Antarctica, South America, Africa, Australia, and New Zealand. They are well-adapted to cold climates and are often found in coastal areas or on islands.
Some live in Antarctica but many live on the coasts of Australia, South America and Africa as well as on the Galapagos Islands.
All the species of finches on the Galapagos Islands appear morphologically very similar, varying mostly in terms of beak size and behavior; they all look very much like a species of finch from the mainland of South America. This suggests that all the finches on the Galapagos are descended from one original colonist species that went through an adaptive radiation. Because of the small, isolated environment of the Galapagos, the finches have become the topic of extensive study into natural selection. The studies that have been conducted on the finches show strong selection for larger beaks during droughts. These data show that climatic changes can have profound effects on the morphology of a species and potentially lead to the formation of new species. When Darwin visited the Galapagos, he observed and collected some of the finch species, believing that they represented a very diverse set of birds that were not closely related. Their significance was not recognized until later, when ornithologist John Gould pointed out that the birds were all closely related finches (Desmond and Moore 1991). But because Darwin originally collected some of the specimens and because the finches showed so much evidence for evolution and natural selection, they have been dubbed "Darwin's finches." This has led many people to conclude (mistakenly) that Darwin's theory of evolution was specifically inspired by the finches The zoologist Thomas Bell showed that the Galápagos tortoises were native to the islands. By mid-March, Darwin was convinced that creatures arriving in the islands had become altered in some way to form new species on the different islands, and investigated transmutation while noting his speculations in his "Red Notebook" which he had begun on the Beagle. In mid-July, he began his secret "B" notebook on transmutation
no. mostly reef sharks.