If you are assuming that all creatures were created simultaneously (practically speaking over the course of 4 days) and then differentiated, no.
The fossil record shows different creatures appearing at different times, millions and even billions of years apart. For example, the first fossil record of living things is of bacteria. While the bacteria themselves evolved and diverged into many genera, families, orders, classes and phyla (macro-evolution), there is no record of any other form of life for 2 billion years. And no record of any multi-cellular form of life for another 700-800 million years.
Furthermore, the earliest multi-cellular forms of life which show up are very different from the species we see today--even when they are clearly in the same phylum, class or order. But in many cases there are transitional forms which indicate those species were ancestral to species which exist today.
So the fossil record supports the gradual appearance of different forms of life, some of them ancestral to today's life-forms, not a simultaneous appearance of many created forms either recently or anciently.