Hibiscus Bullseye Blueprint and Creation
Although the secular science industry shuns evidence for design, occasionally its members slip up and imply that it actually happens. Design has been demonstrated when looking at biology from an engineering perspective which leads to better science.
Getting bees to the pollen is an example of mutualism, benefiting both flower and bee. See? But evolution is supposed to happen without purpose. Mutualism here supposedly means that both parties evolved so they could help each other, and have this happen through random processes. That'll be the day! It's a much more reasonable conclusion that the Master Engineer makes it happen.
The word bullseye can refer to a target at the center of the flower. It is inviting to bees. Researchers used the word blueprint, which implies an engineer, when they evosplained how Hibiscus trionum developed its own bullseye and the way petals form to attract pollinating bees.
Hibiscus bullseye, Wikimedia Commons / Agnieszka Kwiecień, Nova (CC BY-SA 4.0) |
The first sentence in a recent evolutionary news story set the stage for the rest of the article: “Flowers like hibiscus use an invisible blueprint established very early in petal formation that dictates the size of their bullseyes—a crucial pre-pattern that can significantly impact their ability to attract pollinating bees [emphasis added].” Such a statement could easily have come from a creation science publication. After all, blueprints come from the minds of architects or engineers and are not cobbled together by mindless processes.
You can read the rest if you buzz on over to "Creation's Bullseye."