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by throwawaylinux
1202 days ago
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No, it's called a continuous ecosystem because it remains very similar. Selective pressure would be very similar, unlike the rare case of certain populations changing significantly when facing a very different situation. You wouldn't be able to tell the difference between a pine tree from 100,000 years ago to one today, let alone 100. Or a rabbit, snake, bee, fish, or bird. |
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Perhaps. Certainly if you put me in front of the two trees I wouldn't be able to tell you which was which. But that's a different question than whether I can tell the difference. If you put me in front of a pine and a fir I couldn't tell you which was which, but it wouldn't be at all difficult to tell the difference.
It might also be relevant that the last time I had any significant contact with any conifer was quite a few years ago.
> it's called a continuous ecosystem because it remains very similar. Selective pressure would be very similar
This is a myth. Specifically, it's the myth of the "living fossil". It's a popular concept, but not a scientific one.
The majority of people can't tell the difference between a coral snake and a king snake. That's not evidence that coral snakes are similar to king snakes.
> unlike the rare case of certain populations changing significantly when facing a very different situation
Not relevant. It also isn't difficult to tell the difference between two populations that were divided by a barrier 100 years ago. Things drift.