Got any that demonstrate something other than microevolution? We have no problem with that.
Sure. Speciation is not a surprise. Macroevolution isn't as common as microevolution, but that's how we get new species. Even YE creationists admit the fact.
The apple maggot fly didn't exist when Europeans first came to America. But they brought apple trees with them. And not surprisingly, a new species of fly evolved to take advantage. The hawthorne maggot fly and the apple maggot fly are now separate populations and do not interbreed.
Speciation in the apple maggot fly: a blend of vintages?
Even Answers in Genesis no longer denies speciation:
Nine out of ten species alive today have arisen in the last 200,000 years, according to a genetic study looking at select portions of DNA from 100,000 species.
Speciation, the formation of new species, is not evolution in action. Rather, it demonstrates the incredible variety God put within each created kind.
answersingenesis.org
Nope. No speciation event evidenced so far in your citation. I admit that I stopped reading after noting:
- Differs from Drosophila pseudoobscura Frolowa by a larger size ...
- a darker coloration of the whole body ...
- Miranda has larger sex combs than pseudoobscura …
And reproductively isolated. A new species. Rather similar to the species from which it evolved. And this is a huge problem for YE creationism. Looking at the world, we see (as Darwin predicted) that there would be lots of transitional species, half-species, and so on. If YE creationism were true, there would be nice, well-defined boundaries. But there aren't. Creationists have no explanation for these facts.
Adapting to an environment is only a microevolution event.
But as you see, even the within a species, evolution produces new and useful functions. Again, something incomprehensible to YE creationism, but perfectly understandable with Christians, who realize that God gave living things the ability to evolve to fit environments.
Evolutionary theory assumes living populations and describes how they change. The origin of life is not part of the theory.
That evolution theory is not comprehensive, to which I agree, puts it under suspicion and warrants skepticism.
In the sense that gravitational theory doesn't explain redox reactions. No one who has any understanding of science at all, thinks this is an issue. Theories only account for the phenomena they explain. Anyone who wasn't sleeping in middle school science class knows this.
(Asks about the evolution of sentient and rational)
Give us testable definitions of "sentient" and "rational", so we can test your assumption
Sure. Evidence a weed that evolved into a sighted being.
So your assumption is that any "sighted being" is sentient and rational? You sure about that? You really have no idea how to define these things, do you? Or would you like to try again?
Evidence an irrational animal whose offspring developed rationality, ie, the ability to abstract from particulars to generals and thereby radically change their lifestyles.
When you provide a testable definition of those things we'll see what we can do. Do you consider other apes to be rational? Let us know what you think.
For instance, do you know of any animals that developed the ability to farm the land
Ants, for example.
How Ants Became the World’s Best Fungus Farmers
Ancient climate change may have spurred a revolution in ant agriculture, Smithsonian researchers find
www.smithsonianmag.com
I really think you haven't given this much thought. First step, go back and get us testable definitions of "rational" and "sentient."
Then we'll see what that tells us.