The Domestication Project was a project we worked on in class to test our hypothesis in order to see if the animal’s behavior, genes, etc affected the things they do daily. For example, one of the students in my grade tested if “A dog’s breed affects the way it’s bark is.” In this project I didn’t necessarily learn things about domestication since I did wild animal rehab, but I learned that even though rehab seems like one of the best options out there, it isn’t always the best. There are other options you can chose rather than rehab that could or could not be more effective. My project was Wild Animal Rehabilitation. I decided to pick this subject because I want to be a vet and help out wild animals as well as domestic animals, but I thought this project would be particularly interesting. I didn’t have enough time to collect my data at an actual rehabilitation center in Durango, so I did some research and looked at some graphs to see if animal rehab is actually successful or not. I found out that rehab is a good choice, but not always the best. For example: 153 birds came in. 57 were released, and 90 of them were either dead, euthanized, or kept for other reasons. So rehab can be good sometimes, but you shouldn’t always depend on it. My future questions are going to be “Why isn’t rehab always successful?” “What do they do to make it successful?”