Help with Biology...

A morphological species is a group of organisms that have a distinctive form: for example, we can distinguish between a chicken and a duck because they have different shaped bills and the duck has webbed feet. Species have been defined in this way since well before the beginning of recorded history. Although much criticised, the concept of morphological species remains the single most widely used species concept in everyday life, and still retains an important place within the biological sciences, particularly in the case of plants. Not sure if this is 100% correct but this is out of my text book.
 
lilypad said:
Hmmm... well I took biology two years ago but I think it's called divergent evolution, or something like that. This could be caused by animals in the same species living in different environments or just mutation.
did you read this? ^
 
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