Not Always a Problem

When people see a lone young animal, they often assume distress or abandonment. However, this isn't always true. In nature, many newborns, like baby rabbits, spend most daylight hours without their mothers. For example, rabbits may be alone up to 23 hours daily. This behavior, though surprising to humans, is natural and part of their survival strategy.
Mothers frequently leave young alone to avoid attracting predators. They return quietly to feed at specific times, usually dawn or dusk. Unnecessary intervention can disrupt this delicate balance and endanger animal survival.
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Avoids premature hierarchy.
Encourages early signal harvesting.
Who has a contrasting viewpoint?
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Provides a resilient baseline lens.