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Efficiency principle

Lessons from Nyala

Preserve energy for decisive moves.

Nyala (Tragelaphus angasii) featured animal image on AnimalDex

Core lesson

Patterns work best when they match the place where you move.

Biological basis

striped forest-edge coat, spiraled horns on males, and quiet browsing behavior give the Nyala a body plan tuned for its niche. Nyalas operate through dense thicket, river forest, and woodland edge Their design links movement, shelter, feeding, and survival into one workable system.

Best use cases

Where this lesson tends to be most useful in practice.

Energy ManagementPrioritizationSustainable Output

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Related lessons

Other animals connected to the Efficiency principle.

Burrowing Parrot

Preserve energy for decisive moves.

A species can solve home-building in ways its relatives never try.

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Coati

Preserve energy for decisive moves.

A good sensing tool becomes more useful when many bodies can search at once.

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Crab

Preserve energy for decisive moves.

You do not always need elegant forward speed. In messy environments, armor, leverage, and the ability to move through narrow edges can be the real advantage.

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