Very simply speaking, species don't change into other species. Their changes are adaptation to climate or geographical conditions, however complex the changes might be. In humans, these adaptation changes might even be for emotional pleasure or joy.
However, two things need to be proven to make evolution having happened:
1. Species change to other species;
2. Random change, that eliminates cause and effect programming.
Even if there is a change in species, somehow, programming still makes it to be something other than what evolutionists understand it to be.
So far, evolution is a hoax, because we aren't really coming close to finding a species change or change without C&E... and we know it.

Yes they do! - Species change to other species. Its called evolution, and it takes time. Small changes here and there, over a (very) long period.
When do you consider a species changed to another species? When they cant breed anymore maybe?
House cats can breed with leopards. Now there might be a complex scientific classification of these, and they are in the same family, but would you not say they are two different species? Sure might never happen in the wild, leopard would just think, hey lunch, but they can breed. How about Tigers and Lions? Do you think of a house cat and a lion as the same thing, species-wise?
How about humans and apes? Can they breed? Dont know if they can, dont know of anybody have tried, but Im sure some have. Ill take a wild guess that some apes can breed with humans, maybe not all but some. Dont want to see the result though!
Why can some species not breed and some that I consider different species still breed? Why cant I breed a giraffe and an elephant or mouse and mosquito? Well the solution is very simple; some species are simply too far removed from their common ancestor on the evolutionary tree, while some are much closer. Too much evolution (change) has happend.
If it was all programming by design, why can there even be any cross-breeding at all? Hmm
let me wonder about that for a moment
..Programmed by design to be able to cross-breed, create new species that was not in version 1 of the whitepaper. Hmmm
I think I will choose to call that evolution.
Can it happen in a lab or by a little human help, it most certainly has happened in the wild, in the span of a billion years, and a billion-billion-billion tests. Must mean by shire statistic that none v1 whitepaper species are running around right now on the planet. Evolution 100% confirmed!