I see there Drosophila at your links. One would say that drosophila could have hade some great evolutionary history if new species can be bred ad hoc in 8 years only. Yet it is not the case - genus Drosophila is old, it arose during Eocene.
Also according anti-darwinian evolutionist Pierre Grasse:
The fruitfly (drosophila melanogaster), the favorite pet insect of the geneticists, whose geographical, biotropical, urban, and rural genotypes are now known inside out, seems not to have changed since the remotest times.
One would say that drosophila could have hade some great evolutionary history if new species can be bred ad hoc in 8 years only. Yet it is not the case - genus Drosophila is old, it arose during Eocene.
Speciation isn't the same thing as morphological change, so your comments don't make any sense.
Indeed and it is now constituted of something like 1,400 species. Not too shabby really since the class Mammalia only has something like 5,800 extant species and arose during the Triassic.
TTFN,
WK
Edited by Wounded King, : deleted excess 0s and revised title