Problem : 
On his voyage with the Beagle, Charles Darwin carefully studied several 
species of finches. He found that many had come from a single species, but they 
had adapted to their environment by choosing different food sources and 
developing radically different beak designs to match their choice of food. What 
pattern of evolution did the finches show? 
The finches showed divergent evolution. As time passed, the different species 
adapted to their own lifestyles and became more and more different from the 
other closely related species.
 
Problem : 
Many species of owls hunt only at night. These winged predators have evolved 
extremely sensitive hearing to help track insects and other prey. Another night 
hunting winged predator, the bat also has extremely sensitive hearing to track 
prey in the dark. What pattern of evolution does this show?
This is an example of convergent evolution. Owls (birds) and bats (mammals) are 
not closely related, but both have evolved similar traits (flight and good 
hearing) to help them fill the same role as night hunters.
 
Problem : 
Imagine two types of ancient forest animals: a goat-like grazing animal and a 
small ground-dwelling rodent that lives on insect prey. At the same time, these 
two animals leave the forest and begin living in grassy plains. The rodent 
evolves large powerful claws for digging burrows to hide in, while the grazer 
develops long legs for running from predators. What type of evolution does this 
show?
This is an example of parallel evolution. The two animals were fairly dissimilar 
to begin with. They filled different roles in the forest environment. When they 
moved to the plains, both animals evolved to adapt to the new environment, but 
they did not become any more or less similar to each other. 
 
Problem : 
What difficulty does convergent evolution pose for evolutionary biologists?
The major difficulty involved with convergent evolution is the formation of 
analogous structures. These structures may appear similar and perform similar 
functions, making it seem that two species are closely related. However, 
analogous structures develop from different ancestral structures and do not 
indicate close relationships.