20 Dec '05 07:31>
Could the life cycle of a frog not be considered a microcosm of the evolutionary process? What about the metamorphosis of a butterfly?
Originally posted by David CNope, no selection pressure. No selective death. It is a wonderful developmental process though and is indicative of the organisms that we evolved from. For example, during the embryonic phase all mammals exhibit a fish-like phase, with tail and everything...
Could the life cycle of a frog not be considered a microcosm of the evolutionary process? What about the metamorphosis of a butterfly?
Originally posted by scottishinnzSelection pressure or selective death aside, this is the process, right? Brain pan expands, lungs develop, leg bones form, etc.?
Nope, no selection pressure. No selective death. It is a wonderful developmental process though and is indicative of the organisms that we evolved from. For example, during the embryonic phase all mammals exhibit a fish-like phase, with tail and everything...
edit; actually, I should say all chordates, rather than all mammals, although the mammals are a subdivision of the chordata. They / we also have gills during development...
Originally posted by scottishinnzI seem to recall that your conclusion -- that the embryonic phases like the fish-like
For example, during the embryonic phase all mammals exhibit a fish-like phase, with tail and everything...