Red Panda
Member
While selective breeding often involves bringing out certain traits in a species, just as evolution does, it isn't really evolution. Breeding involves selecting specific traits before mating, in anticipation that the resulting trait will be more beneficial, either to the breeder or to the organism. Evolution does not. Evolution is more of a crap shoot, wherein the resulting change may or may not be beneficial. Moreover, unlike evolution, selective breeding almost never results in a new species. Selective breeding is a purposeful enterprise. Evolution is not.
No. evolution is not a crap shoot. It is a very methodical and gradual process. You have four groups of the same species of birds. One group goes off and starts feeding on the vegetation by the shore. Another group goes off and starts feeding on the insects in the ground. The third eats fruit from the trees. The fourth eats berries from the shrubs. The birds with the slightly better beak for the type of food they are eating will thrive better than those with a slightly worse beak. And those that thrive will mate and have offspring. Over time, the beak will change until it becomes specified for that particular food. There will come a point in time when the group that went down to the shore to eat vegetation will have a beak which is completely unsuited to eating fruit or berries or insects. At that point in time, you have four new species of birds. It does NOT happen all at one time. There is NO jump from one species to another. It is a gradual change.
Genes mutate all the time. It is not the mutation of genes which directly causes the formation of a new species, it is the process of evolution or natural selection which does it.
Selective breeding is the same PROCESS only done artificially not naturally. The breeder says I want this characteristic in the offspring. The environmental conditions determine that a longer beak is better for getting insects than the shorter one. It is the same process.