enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Habitat fragmentation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habitat_fragmentation

    Predicted fragmentation and destruction of Great Ape habitat in Central Africa, from the GLOBIO [1] and GRASP projects in 2002. Areas shown in black and red delineate areas of severe and moderate habitat loss, respectively.

  3. Wildlife conservation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildlife_conservation

    Wildlife conservation refers to the practice of protecting wild species and their habitats in order to maintain healthy wildlife species or populations and to restore, protect or enhance natural ecosystems. Major threats to wildlife include habitat destruction, degradation, fragmentation, overexploitation, poaching, pollution, climate change ...

  4. Disjunct distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disjunct_distribution

    Also called range fragmentation, disjunct distributions may be caused by changes in the environment, such as mountain building and continental drift or rising sea levels; it may also be due to an organism expanding its range into new areas, by such means as rafting, or other animals transporting an organism to a new location (plant seeds consumed by birds and animals can be moved to new ...

  5. Human–lion conflict - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human–lion_conflict

    Human–lion conflict refers to the pattern of problematic interactions between native people and lions. Conflict with humans is a major contributor of the decline in lion populations in Africa. [1] Habitat loss and fragmentation due to conversion of land for agriculture has forced lions to live in closer proximity to human settlements. [2]

  6. African forest elephant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_forest_elephant

    Both African elephant species are threatened foremost by habitat loss and habitat fragmentation following conversion of forests for plantations of non-timber crops, livestock farming, and building urban and industrial areas. As a result, human-elephant conflict has increased.

  7. Intact forest landscape - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intact_forest_landscape

    An intact forest landscape (IFL) is an unbroken natural landscape of a forest ecosystem and its habitat–plant community components, in an extant forest zone. An IFL is a natural environment with no signs of significant human activity or habitat fragmentation, and of sufficient size to contain, support, and maintain the complex of indigenous biodiversity of viable populations of a wide range ...

  8. African elephant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_elephant

    Number of African elephants Men with African elephant tusks in Dar es Salaam, c. 1900. Both species are threatened by habitat loss and fragmentation, and poaching for the illegal ivory trade is a threat in several range countries as well.

  9. Defaunation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defaunation

    The World Wildlife Fund’s Living Planet Report 2022 found that wildlife populations declined by an average 69% since 1970. [1][2][3] Defaunation is the global, local, or functional extinction of animal populations or species from ecological communities. [4] The growth of the human population, combined with advances in harvesting technologies ...