Wiccan_Child
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Indeed. But then, evolutionary theory implies that descendants of E. coli will always be E. coli, regardless of how much they evolve. Just as the descendants of mammals will always be mammals, so too will the descendants of humans always be humans. It's just that, a million years from now, "H. sapiens" will cease to be the name of a species, and instead refer to the name of a taxon under which a number of species are grouped. 'Mammal' was once a species, but has since speciated immensly. While all its descendants are all mammals, individual species have evolved in their own right.If the nature could not make E.Coli evolve to a non-E.Coli in 4 billion years, I don't think we can do that either in no-matter-how-many years.
In any case, your original post claimed that fungi and bacteria do not evolve. This is demonstratably false, since we have observed bacterial evolution in a matter of decades.
Note that, in the case of Flavobacterium, they evolved their Nylon-eating ability of their own accord; no human interfered with their evolution, and their discovery was purely accidental.
In the case of E. coli, the scientists merely seperated a single population of nearly identicle E. coli bacteria into seperate flasks and observed their changes. After ~33000 generations, one particular strain of E. coli was observed to have evolved a way to ingest the citric acid in the medium. While the strain was still E. coli (and always will be E. coli)
All of them. They are all E. coli, but they have also all evolved from E. coli ancestors.If you do not agree, then tell me which bacterium is evolved from E.Coli?
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