Protection of wildlife may make an important contribution to the lives of our animals, but what if the lives of these animals interfere with our economic interests? Why do we endanger the lives of these innocent animals? I have chosen this topic about wildlife protection as I think healthy people need to say it and do it. As we decided to reduce everything, I saw that an animal TV documentary's helpless animals could not go anywhere. Yes, we may need to use our natural resources to survive, why do not you participate more in recycling or other options?
"The wildlife needs to live" is our motto of the landscape protection team. To protect conservation balance, species and wildlife corridors, we are working on habitats, and our wildlife must survive, prosper and find food and spouses. We are increasingly involved in national monuments, sea quasi-national parks, national marine reserves, and national wildlife sanctuaries. The government is dependent on the protection of these important large scale ecosystems as they are interested in buying and selling public land such as Bear Year State Memorial, Arctic National Wildlife Sanctuary, Tonga National Forest etc. to the industry A wildlife spokesperson is a defender. .
Wildlife defender! My colleagues at Defenders led our outdoor protection and policy recommendations to identify and apply strict wildlife science and to make a hard decision on how to best protect our dangerous wildlife It was. After joining the team in December, I am proud to be a guardian of wildlife and become a scientific guardian. At the Defender Headquarters in Washington DC, five blocks north of the White House, we are at the forefront of President Cardinals' science warfare, and science has already decided to be a powerful tool for us.
Defenders have a long history of protecting native wildlife in North America (71 years!). Founded in 1947, Defenders considers wildlife and habitat preservation first, protecting biodiversity first. We believe in the intrinsic value of wildlife and the natural world, change our policies and institutions, and promote innovative solutions to ensure the protection of wildlife. Sea otters living in the east coast of North America (perhaps New England) were hunted by fur traders in the late nineteenth or early twentieth century. The Caribbean Monk Seal last appeared in the 1950s was declared formally extinct in 2008 by hunting and overfishing of its food sources. After changing the habitat and invading the non-native species in the Mojave desert, the bugs of the tepopa were in danger of extinction around 1970. Probably the most famous (and controversial) is ivory woodpecker.