Essay sample library > The Bats, the Blind, and the Butterflies

The Bats, the Blind, and the Butterflies

2023-08-19 16:36:23

I can not deny that science has developed rapidly throughout history. But one question could not be answered, although it was raised as early as Plato. Let's consider whether human beings have ideas or entities different from physical brains. Or just brains, control everything, including selections and emotions. Thoughts do not have physical properties. So, how do they reside in a physical container like the brain? All of these questions explain "physical and mental problems". In the article "How about a bat?", The author Thomas Nagel shows his own views on physical and mental problems.

Let's give up myth first. Bats are not blind. They will not fly to your hair. Most people do not have rabies. Bats do not blow mice. Because only one bat - vampire bat drinks blood, it will never be yours. Finally, if someone says you have a bat on your bell tower, that is an insult to you and the bat. Bats deserve respect. They are necessary. They ate insects that destroyed the crop and left excellent fertilizer - fowl of birds. Bats also pollinate plants such as cocoa, banana, mango and agave. Vampire bats produce powerful anticoagulant in saliva for use in human medicine to prevent stroke. Oh - Another brief fact - bats are the only mammals that can fly

Bats and agave are considered to have evolved together. Ladybugs are an endangered species that treats with agave nectar. The bat involves pollen grains. When they fly to find more food, they move new pollen - promote cross fertilization. Below is the explanation from Bats magazine. Both plants and bats are considered to be symbiotic because they benefit from this relationship. Scientists believe that this relationship is the result of co-evolution of bats and plants and because the dependence is so strong that plants can not breed without bat intervention, and plants do not exist The bat will starve. This relationship seems to be very sensitive to interference

In addition to lightening the world, butterflies are also an important pollinator. With bees, birds, bats, and some small mammals, butterflies help to transfer pollen from one plant to another. When they drink honey from flowers to flowers, pollen grains adhere to them. Those grains will accumulate on another flower and keep the cycle fertile. Safari Park's butterfly jungle. Since the butterfly deserve recognition, the San Diego Zoo Safari has created an event for their honor: the butterfly jungle, the annual spring festival. In our tropical rainforest greenhouse, thousands of butterflies are visible around it while we are harvesting nectar from flowers and baits. Preparation of this event begins a few months ago. I am capturing butterflies from Butterfly Farm in Latin America