“Once upon a time, folklore shaped our thinking about wolves. It was only in the past two decades that biologists have started to build a clearer picture of wolf ecology…. Instead of seeing rogue man-eaters and savage packs, we now understand that wolves have evolved to live in extended family groups that include a breeding pair typically too strong, experienced individuals along with several generations of their offspring. Haber argued that older wolves pass the knowledge down to younger pack members and …show more content…
Without the older ones around the young ones, it’s basically leaving them to die, or having a young child to live without anyone. But if it is a child, the story changes? Like if that animal dies, it dies, so what. That’s why we need to protect the world from people who think like that. That’s why this world is failing. I know you are going to count off for me doing this, but it’s true. We need to protect almost everything, because the majority of the world doesn’t care if it doesn’t affect them. The way that some people think, I’m surprised this world isn’t worse than it already is. We need to protect everything before it is gone. Because the resources on this Earth is limited. When something us human need is gone, we will not be able to make. For example, we are cutting down trees, trees give us oxygen to breathe, it takes years to grow trees. When something is gone it is gone, and the world will be