Back together again
Rose-breasted grosbeaks are very different from scarlet tanagers. These bird species live in different places, they sing different songs and each sports a distinctive look. They are so different that many thought that they must have diverged from an ancestor who lived at least 10 million years ago. But nature is full of surprises. A bird resembling a Rose-breasted grosbeak, but singing the scarlet tanager song was recently discovered. DNA evidence showed it to be a hybrid between the two species. Is it realistic to believe that birds that have diverged for 10 million years are still able to interbreed? Or are these two bird species not actually separated by 10 million years, just as greyhounds and pugs are still dogs despite being bred to have distinct differences over only hundreds of years? Unexpected hybrids are not uncommon. Maybe they are better explained as creatures created to surprise and delight us with their ability to change and develop in unexpected ways, yet remain part of the same animal group that God created in the first place. Reference: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ece3.9152
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Back together again
Rose-breasted grosbeaks are very different from scarlet tanagers. These bird species live in different places, they sing different songs and each sports a distinctive look. They are so different that many…
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