Biofluorescence Baffles Evolutionists

This is probably one of those things you may have seen, but cannot remember the five-syllable word for it. Some creatures absorb light (usually ultraviolet or blue) and then give it out again as a different color. The expensive word for this is biofluorescence. It occurs in many organisms.

Researchers concluded that biofluorescence evolved independently over 100 times. That is a popular miracle and rescuing device in the secular science industry called convergent evolution. Since Darwin's disciples cannot explain how something evolved once, they obscure it with quantities.

Aequorea victoria (crystal jellyfish), Wikimedia Commons / Sierra Blakely
The researchers studied teleost fishes. Supposedly, they had a prairie-schooner full of evolutionary changes for biofluorescence. The empirical evidence? Nuffin. They used evolution to demonstrate evolution — highly illogical, Captain. Mathematical models look good on paper, but are based on presuppositions. The most logical conclusion was not mentioned: The Creator built in traits in many creatures.

From the San Juan Islands in Washington, to the Luminous Lagoon in Jamaica, biofluorescent marine fish have mesmerized millions of curious onlookers for generations. Their awe-inspiring, ethereal glow serves far more than a mere aesthetic purpose. In fact, there is growing evidence that it plays a vital role in their ecosystem: facilitating communication, providing camouflage, and even luring prey – functions all woven into their biological design. Yet, despite the remarkable aesthetic and functional sophistication of these organisms, prevailing evolutionary models continue to assert that such complexity emerged through entirely undirected random processes—remarkably, suggesting that biofluorescent traits independently evolved over a whopping 100 times.

To learn more and see why their claims are unscientific and illogical, see "What Is Biofluorescence, and Did It Evolve?"