You’re trying to say this is a transitional between fish and amphibian.
But it doesn’t help your case.
The supposed linear progression of species, if true, would have to be immensely complicated. Its not just a matter of gills changing to lungs, or fins to feet.
The total number of transitional forms, if evolution were true, would be vastly greater than the total number of species. Because for any two species, there are countless necessary genotypic and phenotypic changes necessary to make the change from one to the other. It seems the number of discrete species between a fish and a salamander would be in the hundreds, or maybe thousands or even more.
The number of transitional forms, if evolution were true, would be far greater than the total number of species. Even if there were only a hundred transitional forms between two known species, we would expect produce at least a few if not a couple dozen fossils evenly distributed along the linear progression.
There are none. We have only discrete species separated by vast morphological, and thus genotypic, differences.
Againthe number of transitional forms, if evolution were true, would be far greater than the total number of species.
How many hundreds or thousands of different species do you think are needed to explain a 2% genetic difference and 6% genomic difference in DNA between a human and chimpanzee?
And why would a process (going from a swimming water breather to a walking air breather) that is evident in the lifetime of an individual of a species be a transformation so elaborate that it might need thousands of different species to explain it?