Arctic Wildlife: Lessons of Lifespan?

Abishai100

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Sep 22, 2013
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There are animals who live in the cold regions of the Arctic such as the caribou and the polar bear.

If animals can survive such adverse conditions, then surely eco-activists and pro-industrialists alike can observe the vitality-protocols of such creatures to better evaluate the carrying capacity activities of humans in New York City and Australia.

We could consider cross-terrain comparisons of lifespan metrics for discussions about migration during climate change.

Isn't this why National Geographic TV was marketed originally?




Arctic Ecology



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National Geographic has been corrupted into being just one more sublime political propagandist. They cannot do a program on wildlife in Cuba without saying, "Since the United States succeeded in isolating the threat of Communism from Cuba, the bird migration patterns, yada, yada, yada ..."
 
*batteries not included!


I agree with you that it seems that virtually no non-profit groups anymore these days can claim they hold no special interests (e.g., politics) and that this fact would affect science-oriented media groups such as National Geographic (in a biased fashion).

However, with the plethora of sci-fi stories/films out there these days about life/perspective re-evaluation (e.g., films about aliens visiting Earth), there must be a creative way to think about 'comparative biology' (and hence 'historical ecology'). Are there college courses offered these days about 'history of ecology' (sort of like a 'history of art' course)?

I've included a link to my 3-part sci-fi creative short-story about life re-envisioned involving alien contact and how such an event can inspire humanity to re-evaluate its 'reference frames' about the cross-species 'sociological analysis' of lifespan (as it pertains to deep adaptive decision-making).



Elias the Alien: Subjective Reality (Short-Story)


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