E. g. guttata said:
If this theory really is going to be rejected for the simple fact that humans are destroying the ecosystem, then would we not have to reject the theory of evolution as well? Would rejecting the theory of evolution will also enevitibly lead to the fact that hybridization cannot be wrong on any level?
If we develop the technology to change the orbit of the moon, and do so, does this negate the theory of gravity?
The process of natural selection comes from "those that are disadvantaged are more likely to be deselected, and those that are more advantaged are more likely to pass on their genes to the next generation." This, alongside "random mutation" are the driving forces behind evolution.
If humans are part of the environment (which we are) then our presence will affect the
course of evolution by altering the "selection criteria." Some species will dwindle and/or die off, and others (such as rats, mice, cockroaches, and seagulls) will prosper. But it will not invalidate the process as a whole.
Animals will still reproduce offspring and be more/less likely to do so based on how well-adapted they are to their environment. Random changes will still occur within each new generation and selection pressures will apply. Thus, the criteria for evolution are still present, so the process will continue.
In order to stop evolution, you would have to remove either reproduction, selection, or mutation. And even if you did that from some point in time forward, it would not invalidate what had happened up to that point.
