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Marianne is comparing two animals: a fruit fly and a fruit bat. She asks, "Do a fruit fly and a fruit bat share a common ancestor in their evolutionary history?" According to evolutionary theory, what is the answer to Marianne's question?

2 Answers

5 votes

Answer:

Yes, because all living things share a common ancestor.

Step-by-step explanation:

A more direct answer. I took the test.

User Stephan Heilner
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3 votes

The answer is; YES

All organisms share one common ancestor in the beginning of life. Different species have branched at different times from common ancestors hence he evolutionary tree looks like tree called a cladogram. The nodes represent the common ancestry while branches depict divergence. Therefore even fruit flies and the fruit bats even though they do not belong to the same species shared a common ancestor at one time in history.

User Peterdotjs
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