highwaystar101 said:
I don't get it? I get it fine, it's you who is (I think on purpose) failing to understand.
No system is ever fully formed, there is always the need for improvement when the environment requires it. Do you think humans just sprouted a fully formed opposable thumb one day? Or do you think it would have evolved from another "fully formed" organ when the thumb offered a new evolutionary advantage?
In the case of the lizards the environment has changed, which has favoured those who can reproduce with this ability for at least this generation. If this trait is required from generation to generation then an advanced form of this will become the norm for that species. This "fully formed" mechanism will change. If this mechanism is required over an extended period of time an advanced form of this will eventually it will become the common place method of birth.
In the paper they effectively say that if this form of birth is retained over a period of many generations then it will lead to an evolution in reduced egg shell thickness which fits with the hypothetical model. This will be an evolution as a result of natural selection.
The eggs of most viviparous lizards are surrounded by some form of tertiary egg envelope during early stages of embryonic development, but the thickness of this structure is less than that of oviparous species (Blackburn, 1993a, 1998). Reduction in eggshell thickness is believed to be a necessary correlate to the evolution of viviparity because thick eggshells would impede respiratory gas exchange during prolonged uterine egg retention (Packard et al., 1977; but see Mathies and Andrews, 2000). If the evolution of viviparity is preceded by gradual increases in the length of intrauterine gestation, gradual reductions in eggshell thickness should also occur (Packard et al., 1977; Guillette, 1993; Qualls, 1996). This hypothesis is supported by interpopulational comparisons within three species of lizards that demonstrate an inverse correlation between length of uterine egg retention and eggshell thickness (Heulin, 1990; Heulin et al., 1992,2002; Mathies and Andrews, 1995; Qualls, 1996).
(source)
The scientists at work here clearly think that the lizards are genetically changing as a result of this. Thy more than suggest that further adaptation is necessary. You can take this as the proof if you like, but I know that regardless of how much proof I show you, you will never accept it.
You claim to accept natural selection, yet you have shown many times that you reject it, almost as an automated response. The weak don't reproduce, the fit do, the successful traits are passed on to the next generation, this is natural selection at work. Natural selection leads to an evolution.
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Yeah I already understood that you see the potential for change in this (I do too, I'm not stupid), you want to talk evolution in general. I well understand that theory , how populations get isolated and how environmental pressure via natural selection works on them to refine genetical traits bla bla bla. A school boy understands that. But that is only theory. Theory =/= reality. We are discussing a specific case here, about these particular snakes.
I repeat (because I was the one who said this article doesn't show evolution at work and you was the one who opposed me): You have the burden of proof to show that the northerners are genetically changed regarding regulation of live birth due to the cold environment. Or else what we read in that article is not a case study of evolution in action.