A chameleon for example, changes color within minutes to suit the environment.
No, they don't. Chameleons are fast, they evade predators, they don't hide from them. Chameleon's shift colour for thermoregulation and communication - they change colour in response to mood, not threats.
That is adaptation and that is an intelligent response to the environment.
That is adaptation. Even if you had the explanation of why they change colour it would still be adaptation, yes. Even if they did change colour for camouflage - let's take seahorses, instead, there are species of seahorse that shift colour to aid in camouflage - the fact that they manifest that change in colour in response to the environment isn't evidence that the ability emerged as a response to the environment. It's evidence that once it was available it provided the seahorses that had it with, potentially, a beneficial trait that gave them a better chance of surviving to reproduction than seahorses in that environment that didn't have the trait.
The existence of colour changing isn't dependent upon the environment, but the persistence and relative frequency of colour changing is. Like, you, the environment exerts selective pressures on things.
That is evidence.
Yes, but not for what you're suggesting that it's evidence for.
I am not saying that the chameleon thinks about it and changes its color. I am saying that the internal system itself enables such a response. That is intelligence.
You have manifestly failed to make any sort of case, there, even if you picked a creature that manifests the trait you say it manifests for the reasons you're ascribing.
O.