nocturne
Esteemed Member
- Messages
- 183
- Reaction score
- 17
- Gender
- Male
- Religion
- Islam
What I meant is, if some plants did become poisonous, why didn't all plants become poisonous? it would be beneficial for their survival because animals wouldn't eat them (due to their bad taste). Why are there still non-poisonous plants that animals can eat? why haven't they become extinct? If evolution were true, shouldn't all plants be poisonous as they would survive while the non-poisonous would have become extinct because they would be the ones that the animals ate?
For plants to survive, reproduction must occur. I might be wrong on this, but plants produce fruits/flowers as a form of reproduction although, they store products of photosynthesis in it as well. Thus, becoming poisonous is counter-productive in most cases.
They are some plants which are poisonous to prevent themselves from being eaten. and others could just be a mistake of evolution.
Why does everything work well together? why do plants get nutrients from soil? why is there soil in the first place? if there were only sand or rocks/pebbles, plants wouldn't be able to grow. Who created the soil?
why is rain beneficial to plants? if rain / water had been harmful (like acid rain) then plants and animals wouldn't survive. Who made the rain/water compatible with plant & animal needs?
Yeah. this is where evolutionist often go wrong. i think its impossible for everything to happen by natural selection. There has to be a hand of god in all this.
my question was, why should poisonous plants taste bad? what makes them taste bad? the bad taste wards off animals so animals don't eat them. That's good for the animals, otherwise animals would end up eating poisonous plants and dying. But why should poisonous plants taste bad while nonpoisonous plants taste good? Why don't all plants taste the same? if evolution had caused it, it would be equally likely for poisonous plants to taste good and nonpoisonous plants to taste bad. But actually, it didn't all happen by itself. God made it happen. God caused poisonous plants to taste bad to keep animals from eating them while nonpoisonous plants don't taste bad in order to make animals eat them, which is necessary for animals' survival.
:thumbs_up:thumbs_up
There still plenty of things for scientist to discover to fill in the missing gaps. End of the day, they still wont be able to answer why we exist.
For plants to survive, reproduction must occur. I might be wrong on this, but plants produce fruits/flowers as a form of reproduction although, they store products of photosynthesis in it as well. Thus, becoming poisonous is counter-productive in most cases.
They are some plants which are poisonous to prevent themselves from being eaten. and others could just be a mistake of evolution.
Why does everything work well together? why do plants get nutrients from soil? why is there soil in the first place? if there were only sand or rocks/pebbles, plants wouldn't be able to grow. Who created the soil?
why is rain beneficial to plants? if rain / water had been harmful (like acid rain) then plants and animals wouldn't survive. Who made the rain/water compatible with plant & animal needs?
Yeah. this is where evolutionist often go wrong. i think its impossible for everything to happen by natural selection. There has to be a hand of god in all this.
my question was, why should poisonous plants taste bad? what makes them taste bad? the bad taste wards off animals so animals don't eat them. That's good for the animals, otherwise animals would end up eating poisonous plants and dying. But why should poisonous plants taste bad while nonpoisonous plants taste good? Why don't all plants taste the same? if evolution had caused it, it would be equally likely for poisonous plants to taste good and nonpoisonous plants to taste bad. But actually, it didn't all happen by itself. God made it happen. God caused poisonous plants to taste bad to keep animals from eating them while nonpoisonous plants don't taste bad in order to make animals eat them, which is necessary for animals' survival.
:thumbs_up:thumbs_up
There still plenty of things for scientist to discover to fill in the missing gaps. End of the day, they still wont be able to answer why we exist.