Are zoos good or bad? Most people think that they are good… but they just do not know about the other side of zoos. Female african elephants live 17 years in zoos but when they are in the wild they live 56 years. Zoos are unethical and should let all there animals out because they are bad for humans, hurt and separate animals, and Unhealthy for animals. Zoos are bad for humans, most people do not believe it but zoos are not educating us, they are hurting us. Evidence for zoos are bad for humans
„I know that, to the common apprehension, this phenomenon of whiteness is not confessed to be the prime agent in exaggerating the terror of objects otherwise terrible; nor to the unimaginative mind is there aught of terror in those appearances whose awfulness to another mind almost solely consists in this one phenomenon, especially when exhibited under any form at all approaching to muteness or universality.” ( Herman Melville, 184) The Whiteness of the Whale represents a chapter which brings
Do you think Wooly Mammoth’s should be brought back? Scientist want to bring back Wooly Mammoth’s but would there be enough money? Or is it not worth bringing back a extinct animal? Wooly Mammoth’s should be brought back. Bringing back the Wooly Mammoth can slow down global warming(Smith, 2016). Mammoth’s grazing and rampling the land exposes soil allowing it to freeze which prevents releases massive amounts of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. With slowing global warming it can help to keep
Three-Toed Sloth The three-toed sloth is a native of the rainforest canopies of Central and South America. There are three species of three-toed sloths: the pale-throated sloth, brown-throated sloth, pygmy three-toed sloth, and the maned sloth. The three-toed sloth is a member of the Bradypus and the Bradypodiate family. The three-toed sloth is also a folivore mammal, meaning they eat exclusively leaves. Because of their diet sloths are low on the trophic levels of their ecosystem. And they require
and introduction of aliens. Therefore, through the addition of further survival pressures, humans changed the local ecosystem, inevitably subjecting megafauna species on the verge of extinction to their demise. Moreover, Martin demonstrates the responsibility of human activity in the extinction of species through the comparison of the relative megafauna age extinctions between
and the humans relied on the animals for survival. The deep history preserved in the land of Saltville reveals a past ecosystem that drew megafauna to its locality. The region, rich with life, is the second oldest known Pre-Clovis site in the Americas, marking its significance in history and archeology. The site possesses signs of humans who hunted megafauna for spiritual and resourceful purposes.