so the fifth digit of the koala is homologous to the human fifth digit?:
https://62e528761d0685343e1c-f3d1b9.../files/17952/area14mp/jf3ryv2z-1353638860.jpg Yes.
Your own souce does, didn't you read it? "They evolved an expanded gut to allow them to process these leaves," Irschick said, adding it was something that had not been documented before. "This was a brand-new structure."
"What could be debated, however, is how those changes are interpreted—whether or not they had a genetic basis and not a "plastic response to the environment," said Hendry, who was not associated with the study."
Said a person completely unrelated to the study. However, did you forget "All of this might be evolution," Hendry said. "The logical next step would be to confirm the genetic basis for these changes."
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2290806/ Were you to try to argue that these changes were adaptive in the same way tanning is in humans, then hatchlings of this lizard would NOT have the same traits in their digestive tract (much like how a woman tanning while pregnant wouldn't make her baby born tan), yet, hatchlings that haven't had a bite to eat have this trait, as put in a quote from my source from an actual scientific paper rather than National Geographic: "Morphological analysis of preserved specimens shows the presence of cecal valves (
Fig. 4) in all individuals, including a hatchling (26.4-mm snout-vent length, umbilical scar present) and a very young juvenile (33.11-mm snout-vent length) examined from Pod Mrčaru."
It's genetic.
secondly- if an entire organ can evolve in about 40 years. does it prove evolution or falsified it? does its mean that a complex eye can also evolve in about 40 years from a simple one?
-_- the generations of that lizard are far shorter than our own, so, of course, they evolve faster than we do. This is why we often use bacteria for evolution based experiments: the faster an organism reproduces, the faster it can evolve. Also, a "complex" eye is a trait of multicellular organisms, while a "simple" eye can be a trait of either multicellular organisms or single celled organisms, depending upon how you define it. If you started out with the simplest multicellular eye, could it evolve significantly into a far more complex version in 40 years? Yes, with extreme selective pressures, a small population, and fast reproduction rate, it could.
Factors that can affect evolution speed
1. Population size: the smaller the population, the faster the species can evolve.
2. Reproduction rate: the faster a species reproduces, the faster its evolution can be.
3. Environment: the more an environment changes, the more selective pressures there are for the species to change along with it.
Those lizards were a very small population (only 5 breeding pairs) separated from the rest in an environment different from what they had previously been in, and they reproduce relatively quickly for multicellular organisms, which is how those 10 reproduced over the course of 36 years to produce a final population of 5,000
To contrast this with humans, our population is huge, and has been in the multiple millions for centuries. Our females aren't usually of reproductive maturity until they are at least 10, and males often aren't until age 15. We actively change the environment around us to suit our needs, removing the selective pressures of the environment almost entirely. No wonder human evolution is so slow these days.