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Get back to basics. Simplify! The adventurous life of a Honey Badger can’t last forever. Come, dig the SOIL.

Go through the process of DECOMPOSITION.

After the badger dies it becomes food for microorganisms in the soil. Carbon moves into the soil as bodies—flesh, blood, and bones—are broken down into smaller and smaller and smaller pieces by bacteria and fungi. The complex organic forms of carbon originally synthesized in the bodies of plants and animals provide nutrients for microscopic organisms as they break the compounds back down into a smorgasbord of simpler forms.

BEGIN AS: Animal Biomass. BECOME: Soil Organic Matter.

C6H12O6 => 2 C2H5OH + 2 C02

Sugar => Ethanol + Carbon Dioxide

Complex organic molecules are broken down to simpler forms in the process of decomposition.

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Run, badger, run! Breathe deeply and exhale. Set the carbon free to drift into the ATMOSPHERE.

Go through the process of RESPIRATION.

As a carbon atom in a sugar, you'll be burned for energy in the badger's muscle, joining two oxygen atoms to become carbon dioxide. Next, you'll travel through the bloodstream to the lungs to be breathed out into the atmosphere.

Respiration is the primary way that carbon leaves living bodies after being useful. Respiration is the reverse of photosynthesis! Respiration begins with oxygen and sugar, and ends with carbon dioxide, water and energy. Photosynthesis begins with carbon dioxide, water and energy, and ends with oxygen and sugar. The energy from light—stored in sugar by a plant eaten by an animal—gets released as chemical energy through respiration.

The carbon dioxide animals breathe in from the atmosphere simply gets breathed right back out. It is not used to build bodies, nor for energy.

BEGIN AS: Animal Biomass. BECOME: Carbon Dioxide.

C6H12O6 + 6 O2 => 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + energy

Sugar + Oxygen => Carbon Dioxide + Water + Energy

Living things burn sugar to release energy in the process of respiration.

Learn much more with Wikipedia: Respiration_(physiology)

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You are Carbon in an Animal

What an active lifestyle. Brain, paw, protein, DNA, ... what role in life don't we play?

Carbon play many many roles in living things. Some carbon compounds are stored as sources of chemical energy, like fats; some act as the building blocks of bodies, like proteins. Within the animal, carbon exists in many complex forms in muscle, blood, bone, and brain matter. Every part, every cell contains carbon.

In bodies, carbon combines with many different chemical partners. Hydrogen, nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfur, iron and other elements combine with carbon in complicated and varied ways. A beautiful ballet of building and breaking bonds goes on in a badger's body.

The human body is composed mostly of organic carbon compounds—protein, fat and carbohydrate—and water.

64% water, 20% protein, 10% fat, 1% carbohydrate, 5% minerals.

Bodies of animals are 30% carbon dry weight.

Learn much more with Wikipedia: Carbon-based_life, Herbivore

glucose, DNA, Amino Acid, ATP, a protein, an enzyme, RNA, a starch, an antigen, a carbohydrate, a hormone, a lipid, a fatty acid, a neurotransmitter, a nucleic acid, a peptide, an amino acid, a lectin, a vitamin, a fat
carbon
carbon