What are the different causes of habitat destruction?

Most species of insects, birds and mammals require a specific habitat to survive. The station provides food and nesting or breeding. When habitats are destroyed, many species disappear. The two main causes of the destruction of habitats are such that are caused by human activity, such as building and agriculture and destruction caused by nature, such as in the form of fires, earthquakes and other natural disasters.

The habitat consists of specific indigenous plants and conditions that provide home and reproductive space for birds, mammals and insects. Many habitats are specific to the area and climate and are very fragile. For example, wetlands are particularly rich in flora and fauna as well as susceptible to damage. Likewise, rainforests provide rich habitats for countless species. Other sites include mild forests, meadows and prairies.

One of the main causes of deforestation is deforestation. Deforestation affects mild, subtropical and tropical areas. Deforestation occurs whenThe majority or all trees in the area are limited either to clean the soil for construction, agriculture, or for the wood itself. Many fine ecosystems, especially in the tropics, are destroyed every day by deforestation.

Filling wetlands for building houses and other structures is also the main cause of destruction of habitats. One pond can create a unique environment that supports many different types. If the developer, the city or the owner of the house fills the pond, a habitat and a species that relied on it will be determined.

Agriculture also causes the destruction of habitats when the forests are clean to create space for agriculture and farming of livestock. The use of fertilizers and pesticides can also cause habitat destruction when chemicals are washed into local waterways and spreads in ecosystems, often changing the Delica Barastion. A large amount of manure produced by livestock also enters the waterh paths, which further increases pollution. Many species rely on lakes, streams and rivers for habitats, and when these areas are touched, the environment is lost. The dams also cause the destruction of habitats by preventing re -evaluation of migration fish into their friction.

human activity is not the only cause of destruction of habitats. Nature itself is constantly changing and changing, and when there is a change, the whole habitat is often lost. For example, wild fires have launched lightning, they can erase forest and grass stands.

In addition, the flood changes the fine dynamics of freshwater flows, rivers and wetlands and overtime stands gradually move. For example, the area of ​​wetlands can dry out and become pastures and destroy the former habitat, but to create a new one. Likewise, grasslands can turn to swamps.

However, human interference causes the greatest damage to ecosystems and habitats. Even planting a garden full of exotic and non -native plants reduces the amount of habitat available to local species. MnOho gardeners therefore plant native plants in their gardens to help restore the station lost during development.

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