Hipertexto Santillana 6 Ciencias Naturales — Pdf 35
Luna finally understood. The textbook’s page 35 wasn’t just a diagram of arrows and names. It was a story of endless transformation—where nothing truly dies; it only becomes something else.
And that was the most interesting story of all. If you have a specific topic from that exact page (like the water cycle, ecosystems, or human body), let me know and I’ll tailor the story more closely! Hipertexto Santillana 6 Ciencias Naturales Pdf 35
That night, Luna and Tito returned with flashlights. The rainforest hummed. Doña Clara pointed to the fallen kapok. “Look closely.” Luna finally understood
Suddenly, a small agouti (a rainforest rodent) scampered onto the log, nibbling a beetle. Then, from the shadows, an ocelot’s eyes gleamed. It watched the agouti but did not strike—not yet. And that was the most interesting story of all
“That’s a cadena alimenticia ,” Tito whispered, pointing. “Fungi → beetle → agouti → ocelot.”
“The fungi are descomponedores ,” Doña Clara whispered. “They break the tough trunk into soft soil. The beetles and ants are consumidores detritívoros —they eat the debris. And the mushrooms’ light? It attracts insects that spread their spores. Everyone has a role.”
As they walked home, Luna looked back. The glowing log looked like a fallen star. She realized that science wasn’t just in books. It was in the dark, in the dirt, in the quiet work of creatures too small to see.