How does evolution explain the diversity of life on Earth?

Evolution is like a game where living things change and improve over time, just like you learn new tricks when you play.

Imagine you have a big box of toys, each toy is a different kind of animal or plant. At first, all the toys are simple: maybe just a few shapes and colors. But as you keep playing with them, some of the toys get more interesting. Maybe one gets wheels so it can roll faster, or another grows bigger and stronger to stand up taller.

That’s evolution, living things change little by little over many years. Some changes help them survive better, like how a bird might develop sharper beaks to eat certain foods. If they do well, their babies get those same traits too. Over time, these small changes add up and lead to new kinds of animals or plants, that’s why we have so many different ones today.

How It Works Like a Storybook

Think of evolution like reading a storybook where each page is a generation. On the first page, there might be just one kind of creature, say, a dinosaur. As you turn the pages, it changes: maybe it grows wings or gets smaller and faster. Each change helps it live better in its world.

So, over millions of years, lots of different creatures came to be, all from simple beginnings, just like how you learn new things as you grow up.

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Examples

  1. A fish learns to live on land, becoming a frog
  2. Different birds have beaks suited for their food
  3. Humans and monkeys share a common ancestor

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