English, asked by kumarsanjay4729, 9 months ago

() Why didn't the animals fight in the beginning?​

Answers

Answered by ishitasahu2210
1

Answer:

If you really want to see evidence of murder, look no further than social mammals.

In 2016, researchers in Spain analyzed data from more than 4 million deaths across 1,024 mammal species, including humans. [8 Human-Like Behaviors of Primates]

Given that there were nearly 16,000 human murders in the United States alone in 2015, according to FBI data, and a plethora of motivations people have for committing murder — from jealousy, to squabbles about money, to hatred toward those who are different — it'd be easy to think that Homo sapiens sapiens would be the species most likely to kill its own kind

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Answered by llɱissMaɠiciaŋll
2

Explanation:

Because, like most humans, animals value their own life and do not want to be injured or killed. Simple and easy to understand. Why most of the time, animals do not fight each other to death. Because, like most humans, animals value their own life and do not want to be injured or killed.

They do this for two reasons: firstly, to push the cubs' mother back into reproductive activity so she can carry the new male's offspring; and secondly, to eliminate traces of the previous leader's DNA, ending his bloodline in the pride and reducing competition among offspring.

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