
The life of a bee is very different from the life of a flower, but the two organisms are related. Both are members the domain Eukarya and have cells containing many similar organelles, genes, and proteins. (credit: modification of work by John Beetham)
This bee and Echinacea flower ([link]) could not look more different, yet they are related, as are all living organisms on Earth. By following pathways of similarities and changes—both visible and genetic—scientists seek to map the evolutionary past of how life developed from single-celled organisms to the tremendous collection of creatures that have germinated, crawled, floated, swam, flown, and walked on this planet.
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- Introduction to Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, Derived from Biology by OpenStax. Authored by: Adrienne Correa. Located at: http://cnx.org/contents/25adc78c-f54a-4ef4-a081-ebe711c480ed@3.19. License: CC BY: Attribution. License Terms: Download for free at http://cnx.org/contents/25adc78c-f54a-4ef4-a081-ebe711c480ed@3.19