Putting aside the anthropomorphization aspect, what does a common housefly or spider do if they inadventently wander aboard a trans-oceanic airplane and emerge half a world away from where they used to live?
Do they experience any impairments in their ability to function in a place with different magnetic fields, barometric pressure, biomes, pollution profiles, etc. than where they came from? (Let’s leave out the simple case of landing in a place with inhospitable temperatures.) If not, is it because they are ready adapters or because they’re simple machines? Will they be capable of reproducing with members of their same species in the new location, or is there genetic drift among populations of houseflies in different parts of the world?
Put simply, if I’m on a plane and watching an errant fly flit around the cabin, should I feel sad that it’s unwittingly being spirited away to what is almost certainly its inevitable doom, or should I be excited for it embarking on a new and exotic life?