New Species, Same Kind: Evidence of Engineered Diversity

New species are often presented as proof that life is evolving. But they instead show how life was designed to diversify from the start. A recent deep-sea study reports 24 new amphipod species and even proposes a new “superfamily.”1 Conventional scientists say this discovery adds a new branch to the tree of life. Yet the real issue with this is not naming new groups—it is explaining the species’ origin. This study provides a clear example of variation within a functioning system, not the formation of a new one.

The research, published in ZooKeys, examined amphipods from the Clarion-Clipperton Zone in the deep Pacific Ocean, a region that is dark, cold, and under high pressure.1 Amphipods are small crustaceans related to shrimp and crabs. Unlike crabs, they do not have a hard outer shell. Their bodies are flexible, segmented, and flattened horizontally—a shape that helps them move along the seafloor. They use specialized appendages for swimming, feeding, and sensing their surroundings. Many act as scavengers, breaking down organic material.

The researchers identified the 24 species by grouping them according to physical traits and genetic data.1 This a normal process, much like sorting parts in engineering. They noted differences in size, antenna length, limb structure, and mouthparts. Some species had longer appendages, likely used to sense food in darkness. Others had stronger feeding structures suited for larger material. The grouping does not explain the origin of this unique creature. It only describes differences among organisms that already exist. Additionally, these distinctions are real, but they remain within a shared framework.1

Despite the variety found in their body parts, all of these creatures have the same basic amphipod design: segmented bodies, jointed legs, and specialized mouthparts. These components must work together at the same time. If one fails, the system fails. Such a level of integration points to purposeful design. And the fact that the creatures are diverse but have the same fundamental features is an example of biological flexibility within biological limits—another indication of design. Observations in creation research show that organisms can respond to their environment in purposeful ways within set boundaries rather than form new biological systems.2 So, amphipods vary in size, shape, and behavior, but their core design does not change. Amphipods remain amphipods even as they adapt, a fact that fits the idea of created kinds that is found in Genesis: “So God created great sea creatures and every living thing that moves, with which the waters abounded, according to their kind” (Genesis 1:21).

As noted earlier, the researchers also recognize how the amphipods share key traits that set them apart from other creatures, which is why the study proposed amphipods belong to a new “superfamily,” a category used to group related families. It sits above family and below order. However, as conventional scientists, the researchers would likely interpret the shared traits as proof of common ancestry.1 But this is a human system of classification that does not show the origin of a new biological system.3 In engineering, similar features often show common design. Designers reuse parts that work well, like jointed limbs and segmented bodies. Their repeated use indicates design, not descent.

As we study life, a clear pattern appears. Organisms show variation, adaptability, and firm limits for the extent of their diversification. The amphipods in this study show all of these. Rather than revealing a new branch of life, this discovery highlights the great evidence of design already present. The more we explore, the more we uncover systems that work with purpose and precision—a pattern not reflective of evolution but of intentional design.

References

  1. Jazdzewska, A. M. and T. Horton. 2026. New Deep-Sea Amphipoda from the Clarion-Clipperton Zone: 24 New Species Described under the Sustainable Seabed Knowledge Initiative: One Thousand Reasons Campaign. ZooKeys. 1274: 1–16.
  2. Guliuzza, R. J. 2018. Adaptive Changes Are Purposeful, Not Random. Acts & Facts. 47 (6): 17–19.
  3. Corrado, J. K. The Role and Realm of Science. Creation Science Update. Posted on ICR.org January 17, 2022, accessed March 27, 2026.

* Dr. Corrado earned a Ph.D. in systems engineering from Colorado State University and a Th.M. from Liberty University. He is a freelance contributor to ICR’s Creation Science Update, works in the nuclear industry, and is a Captain in the U.S. Naval Reserve.

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