The World and wild life
From the deepest oceans to the thinnest air above mountain peaks, life has figured out how to exist everywhere. Whales sing through miles of dark water. Insects carry entire ecosystems on wings no wider than a fingernail. Wolves shape forests just by walking through them. Nothing lives alone for long—every creature leaves marks, footprints you can’t always see.
Wildlife doesn’t just occupy the world; it builds it. Coral reefs rise like underwater cities, made by tiny animals working slowly together. Birds scatter seeds that turn empty ground into forests. Predators keep balance not through cruelty, but necessity. Even decay has a job—fungi and scavengers turning endings into beginnings.
There’s a wild intelligence in all of this. Not planned, not written down, but learned through survival and time. Animals know when to migrate, when to hide, when to trust the wind or the stars. They listen to the planet in ways humans once did, and sometimes forget how.
The world with wildlife is loud, messy, beautiful, and constantly in motion. Without it, the planet would still spin—but it wouldn’t feel alive.
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