Monday, October 21, 2013

Pre war rentions and wildlife discuss




The tensions of impending wars have always claimed substantially from the lives of many peoples across the world, but the world does not seem to be realizing how dearly it pays for the damage to wildlife such tensions leave behind.
Discuss.
When war clouds loom over a nation, national security is the thing that matters most and, over the years, man has paid dearly for it. But it is saddening that the whole world is not aware of the damage such tensions inflicting on wild life. This needs a discussion.

The human history has hoary stories about people abandoning whatever is theirs for the cause of their nation whenever they felt war in the air. Millions of people have abandoned all their savings for ever and fled for good. Children and old people have had a different story prior to any war. The loss of livelihood, at least for some time, displacement from a native land, adjusting with a new order and, above all, the psychological trauma on knowledge that the worst would befall on them any moment are some of the losses.

It is all predictable and, if there is will, reparable as well. What happens to the wild life pre-war? The first thing is ecologically sensitive and geographically strategic positions may experience the rumbles of war. Noise and light sensitive avian and nocturnal beings will have to suffer the shocks of men and machinery movement. The animals in the verge extinction and the preserved ones in the zoos may bear the brunt of prewar tensions. No wonder, the resultant ecological equilibrium may last for ever, and its management will be far beyond human potentials. Animals are evolutions of millions of years, so is the ecosystem.  

In short, the discussion reveals that pre-war shocks have made man cope with them time to time, but the story different when it comes to wild life. If the world remains callous towards animals prior to any war, the effects would be far more devastating than the world imagines. 

290 words
Ajaypeesdoc.21.10.13


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