Slimebeast said:
Again you are putting things that are not needed for the observations in that article. Pretend these snakes have a sensitivity to temperature in their egg regulating hormone system. The hormone stimulates the spasms of the egg chamber inside the snake. Hot weather triggers an increase in hormone levels and cold weather triggers a decrease in levels. Natural selection has nothing to do with it. You theorize about what happens after those snakes get isolated from each other in cold and hot regions. That may lead to unique traits or it may not. You accept that what we observe here is one step of evolution of egg laying to mammalian-type live birth. Now if that is in fact evolution between egg and live birth right in front of our eyes, then there should also be examples of the other steps (since this supposedly happened several times independently in evolutionary history). Then please show me some other egg-placenta middle forms. Now I am not even sure such creatures exist but I don't think they do and I assume they don't. But according to your theory they should.
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Those that are better at producing the hormones in cold weather are more likely to produce offspring which share that ability, seems like a perfect example of natural selection to me.
(Also, I don't think this is a step towards mammalian birth, I think this maybe something new, you've just assumed that position of me). - After some reading I retract this statement.
But yet again you've avoided my question. My question is concerning the fact that these animals can pass on their traits, and the strong survive to do so. That is exactly what this is. All you've got to do is prove to me that either the most fit don't survive or that genetic traits are not passed on from one generation to the next. Yet you've avoided this question twice now!
Your postulation that this is not evolution rests on the notion that the fit members of a population do not have the ability to pass on their genes. Please, show this to me; the burden of proof is one you. In fact I think every biology department of every top university in the world would be interested in this.