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RE: Punday Monday 311

This is the understory of a calm and collected rainforest, known as the Temperate Rainforest. It maintains a delicate balance of plant and animal species, snaking through the channels in the forest. Once a very decisive and straightforward forest, with time and wisdom it became an indeciduous forest calmed by raining in its strong emotions. The time came for the election of the next King of the Rainforest, with the emergence of the mighty Euterpe precatoria, who had the potential victory in the palm of its roots. He was perceived as the height of his respective region, as he was the only one who could detect the source of the uncharacteristically smelly rain that had been pouring through the roof of the forest onto the forest floor (it had, indeed, turned out to be a very large can of pee whose source was never determined). Nevertheless, he did not want to touch or be touched by his contemporaries, rejecting the throne due to crown shyness. The rejection had caused a stir in the biomasses. The tigers roared, the bear market of Amazon populated with sales, and the bulls rode Jaguars. The Macaws cawed, the macaques threw caques at each other. The fungi made fun of the primates with little anacondas, and the Napoleanic chameleons retreated as if they had lost their invasion of the land. What could reestablish the declining timber of the rainforest? The Liana sisters awoke, spurred by the epiphytes tickling their feet, climbing their way towards the sun. As they arose, the entire ecosystem paused its habituated habitat rehabilitation, inspired by the search for sun in spite of the chaos beneath. As the Liana sisters made their way up, a sense of littoral peace came over the entire rainforest, and the mighty Euterpe precatoria understood that, with a little help from his friends and the Beatles of the rainforest, he could lead the ecosystem back to the equilibrium it once had. Depositing his seed into the charity of the riverbanks, he took the oath of King, and the Earth could once again breathe the oxygen the rainforest produced.