Asked by Chuck Bass
An organism’s DNA allows for a great deal of variation, and there is evidence that many organisms are now evolving and changing into different kinds of organisms.
True
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True.
DNA variation (mutation, recombination) fuels evolution, and we have abundant evidence of ongoing evolutionary change: antibiotic- and pesticide-resistant microbes and insects, rapid beak-size shifts in Darwin’s finches, industrial melanism in peppered moths, and documented cases of recent speciation (e.g., some cichlid and stickleback populations). Over long timescales such changes can accumulate into larger-scale differences between groups.
DNA variation (mutation, recombination) fuels evolution, and we have abundant evidence of ongoing evolutionary change: antibiotic- and pesticide-resistant microbes and insects, rapid beak-size shifts in Darwin’s finches, industrial melanism in peppered moths, and documented cases of recent speciation (e.g., some cichlid and stickleback populations). Over long timescales such changes can accumulate into larger-scale differences between groups.
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