As the wildlife habitat decreases, wildlife corridors are rapidly increasing, and there are problems in the coming century. The remaining 'untouched' wilderness problem is that large wild habitats are eventually manipulated to meet human needs. In many cases, insufficient land management will not only invade subtle habitats, but also put pressure on their equilibrium state and endanger the specific species of the area to extinction.
"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. .
Unique activities and initiatives highlight the species we are actively protecting. The Los Angeles Cougars Conservation of the National Wildlife Federation advocates establishing an important wildlife corridor for the Mountain Lion in southern California. As part of the Wildlife GardenTM program of the National Wildlife Federation, Butterfly Heroes will make people aware of the dilemma that the number of monarch butterflies will decline. The program links gardeners, children and families to create habitats that will help princes and other pollinators
Wildlife Corridor - When habitats are separated by roads, urban areas, agricultural lands, etc., the population is isolated and can not move within the natural range to find enough resources and spouses. A corridor of wildlife will recombine habitat debris and help maintain genetic diversity. Laws and policies - Some endangered species are protected by law or trade. CITES (International Convention on International Convention on Endangered Species) is an intergovernmental international agreement to ensure that trading of wildlife specimens does not threaten its survival.
Planning policy for wildlife links and corridors, Bury UDP policy EN 6/4 - For details on policy EN 6/4, see Appendix 2. Wildlife links and cloisters are defined as migration, diffusion, inheritance of wildlife. trade. 1.2 In Berry, the corridors of wildlife are usually built entirely or essentially on networks of rivers and valleys, while the connection of wildlife generally provides a natural life It is. It is narrower than the corridor but has similarly important features including narrower and clearer features such as railway levees, highway rims and canals.