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dýra

Dýra is the Icelandic term commonly used to refer to animals—multicellular, eukaryotic organisms that feed by ingesting other organisms. In everyday language it denotes animals in general, while scientific contexts place them in the biological kingdom Animalia. Animals range from simple sponges to complex mammals, and they occupy nearly every habitat on Earth, from oceans to deserts and high mountains.

Taxonomy and diversity: Animals are divided into major groups such as invertebrates (for example insects, mollusks,

Ecology and life history: Animals act as predators, prey, pollinators, decomposers, and symbiotic partners in ecosystems.

Etymology and usage in Icelandic: Dýr is the base Icelandic word for animal, used for a single

crustaceans)
and
vertebrates
(fish,
amphibians,
reptiles,
birds,
mammals).
Classification
relies
on
features
such
as
body
plans,
embryonic
development,
tissues,
and
genetics.
The
animal
kingdom
encompasses
tens
of
millions
of
species
described,
with
many
more
yet
unnamed,
and
new
discoveries
continue
to
refine
relationships
among
lineages.
Reproduction
is
diverse,
including
sexual
and
asexual
strategies,
with
life
cycles
ranging
from
direct
development
to
complete
metamorphosis.
Human
activities
affect
animal
populations
through
habitat
destruction,
climate
change,
pollution,
and
overexploitation,
making
biodiversity
conservation
a
central
environmental
concern.
animal.
Dýra
occurs
in
inflected
forms
such
as
possessive
or
dative
cases
in
sentences.
The
term
appears
in
Icelandic
biology
and
natural
history
contexts
to
discuss
animals
collectively,
ecology,
and
zoology,
mirroring
its
use
in
many
languages
to
describe
the
animal
world.