You are Carbon in an Animal
As carbon in the honey badger some may say, “this is as good as it gets!” Put up against any competitor, you’re sure to win all bets.
Honey Badgers are omnivores which means they eat both plant and animal material. When a Badger eats any form of plant material the carbon absorbed through photosynthesis is then integrated into the badgers life cycle -- used as energy or turned in badger body parts.
The first animals appeared around 900 million years ago.
Learn much more: wikipedia.org/Herbivore
The adventurous life of a Honey Badger can’t last forever. Break it, break it down, mic check, yo yo, yo and explore amazing forms of carbon for the next several thousands year. Can you dig the SOIL?
Go through the process of DECOMPOSITION.
When the badger dies, carbon is transported into the soil as its flesh, blood, and bones break apart into smaller and smaller and smaller pieces. Some of the carbon stored in the badger's body is also used as energy by the microorganisms that help it decompose.
C6H12O6 => 2C2H5OH + 2C02
Sugar => Ethanol + Carbon Dioxide
Complex organic molecules are broken down to simpler forms in the process of decomposition.
Learn much more: wikipedia.org/Decomposition wikipedia.org/Decomposer
A wild leopard has followed the trail of honey and the tears of your prey. It's time for fight or flight. Honey Badgers can only live through so many fights. Come, soar free! Drift into the ATMOSPHERE.
Go through the process of RESPIRATION.
As a carbon atom in a sugar, you'll be burned up in the badger's muscle then join 2 oxygen atoms and travel back to the lungs. The badger will breathe you out into the atmosphere. Job well done.
C6H12O6 + 6O2 => 6CO2 + 6H2O + energy
Sugar+ Oxygen => Carbon Dioxide + Water + Energy
Living things burn sugar to release energy in the process of respiration.
Learn much more: wikipedia.org/Respiration_(physiology)