Animal Conservation

  Wildlife conservation is related to the protection and preservation of animals. By conserving wildlife, we are ensuring that future generations can enjoy our natural world and the amazing species that live in it. Plants and animals have life events that seem to run like clockwork every year. Birds can migrate, mammals can hibernate, flowers bloom, and leaves change color. The study of how the biological world controls these natural events is called phenology. Phenology is an important subject for conservationists to study because it helps us understand the patterns of specific species and the overall health of the ecosystem. Each species has an impact on those in its food chain and community, and the timing of one species' phenological events can be very important to another species' survival.

  When animals eat their prey, they consume more than just energy. They also absorb all the chemicals and nutrients inside the prey. Sometimes animals ingest pollutants that can be stored in their fat and tissues. Human-derived pollution has added heavy metals, petroleum, and industrial and pharmaceutical chemicals to the environment. Plants, fish and other species absorb these toxins, and as they are eaten by predators, the toxins are then absorbed into the predator's tissues.


Matheus Storck

https://www.nwf.org/Educational-Resources/Wildlife-Guide/Understanding-Conservation


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