Yes because evolving within a species = evolving from one species to another
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Micro and Macroevolution work with the exact same rules, change of a species. They are just at different scales. In microevolution you have small changes in a species in a small amount of time. In macroevolution, you have the exact same thing, in a much large time frame. These small changes continue happening, in the end you have an organism that is different from the one that started. Look up what a ring species is. A species is defined as a group of organism that can mate, have offspring, and those offspring can have offspring of their own. After a certain amount of change within a species, they will not be able to make offspring with the species they were so they have evolved into a new species. This has been directly observed in the past 100 years. In macro evolution, you are taking the same thing, and letting it continue on for much longer periods of time