Who would claim that ? Most who believe in ID believe in micro evolution, adaption of a species that can be extreme but it remains the same species or type. This may be an example that a biologist who leans toward ID might have more specific idea's, but I am not a biologist. Show the micro organism turning in to one that say, causes a flu, or show the mosquito turning into, say, a beetle, then you'll have something
It is clear from your post that you indeed don't understand biology, especially relating to evolutionary mechanisms.
A species of animal cannot produce offspring of another species of different family and genus. Evolution don't work in the way you suggested.
A mosquito cannot give birth to beetle, because they do not belong in the same genus and family. In fact, they don't belong even in the same order of insect (class).
The order of insect for the mosquito family (Culicidae) is Diperta. Diperta include other "fly" families. So the flies and mosquitoes are more closely to related to each other, they would to any of the beetle families.
Beetle families are too many to list, but that those families all belonged order called Coleoptera.
I don't know enough other about the palaeontology of insect world to tell you when the split occurred, but Genesis make no mention of insects in the creation, but they existed long before any land vertebrae animals, including the dinosaurs.
In Genesis 1:20-23, on the fifth day, god created both sea creatures and birds at the same time.
But there are no evidences of birds existing before any land vertebrae that walk or crawl on earth, which make it false. Dinosaurs flourished millions of years before mammals and birds. And the first reptiles existed even before the dinosaurs, and hence before the birds.
But according to 1:24-25 (6th day) cattle and wild animals were created after the birds, and reptiles would be included among the "wild animals".
Yes, sea creature existed first, but invertebrates existed before vertebrate creatures. And insects are not vertebrae creatures, having exoskeleton instead of vertebrae.
The order of land animals in the order of their earliest appearances are this:
- Insect (396 million years old, Devonian period)
- Amphibians (370 million years)
- Reptiles (312 million years)
- Dinosaurs (231 million years)
- Mammals (225 million years, but only began flourishing after extinction of dinosaurs about 66 million years ago)
- Birds (160 million years)
As stated in point 5, mammals only began to flourish after the Mesozoic era, in the Cenozoic era, where they were more diverse, but they weren't the first mammals.
Yes, cattle and humans appeared and flourished later, birds definitely didn't appear before the insects, reptiles, the earliest mammals and the dinosaurs; all these land animals did exist first before the birds.