During the "football player" interview, women realize the beauty of society and are willing to accept the pain to maintain their position in society. Because the role of women in this society is the lack of power, they depend entirely on men. Therefore they are willing to endure the painful torture of pushing their toes under the weight of their body, so they are enough to attract rich husbands.
An interesting pollination story is Yuccaga. Female moths were genetically programmed to pack small pieces of pollen that she gathered into the stigma of each silk orchid. In the spring, when Yuccaga comes out from the underground scorpion, it is usually matched to the flowering period of Yucca, and the female laying eggs in the ovary of the seed development flower ovary. Then she pollinates the flowers themselves. With the emergence of larvae, they eat the seeds produced by Yucca for pollination.
One of the most interesting partnerships of nature between Pronuba Moth and Yucca. In the process of putting silk eggs in a silk orchid, moths fertilize plants, but Yucca uses some seeds as food for moth larvae. Please look for dry seed pods and small holes in them that show where the larvae leave the pod and landed on the ground. In the spring, these larvae became adult moths and the cycle continued. Rio Grande Cotton Woods is the largest plant in the dunes. Because of its size, these trees attract wildlife diversity. The creatures fascinated by Cottonwood are porcupines. It eats food on trees, and paying attention to branches and other rough appearances peeling on some of the branches. Big Horn Ow and other birds are resting in and around Cottonwood.
Birds are the predominant predators of moths. In the case of birds, observing the moth mixed with the color of the bark and eating it is far more difficult than finding a moth which is clearly contrasted with the fuselage. It is said that moths melting into the background are camouflaged. As the trunk gets darker, the dark moths are camouflaged, hard to find, and the living environment is better. This assumption is not enough and we need to conduct further experiments. A UK ecologist named Kettlewell prepared another test for this hypothesis. He placed the same number of bright and dark moths in the two areas. In some areas, trees are usually colored. In other areas, they turned black with ash. After that, he recaptured, edited and calculated all the moths that he could do. Kettlewell discovered that his light moths survived more in uncontaminated areas.