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Endangered Species

Endangered Species. By: Jose Calderon and Arturo Espinoza. What is an Endangered Species?.

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Endangered Species

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  1. Endangered Species By: Jose Calderon and Arturo Espinoza

  2. What is an Endangered Species? • Definition: An endangered species is a native species that faces a significant risk of extinction in the near future throughout all or a significant portion of its range. Such species may be declining in number due to threats such as habitat destruction, climate change, or pressure from invasive species.

  3. Endangered species affect Ecosystem? • Endangered Species Affect Our Ecosystems • Species on the brink of extinction affect us all more than we may realize. • All animal and plant life is part of a complex ecosystem that also includes our lands and our waters. Remove one or more of those parts and you damage the ecosystems, sometimes beyond restoration. These ecosystems provide clean water, breathable air, fertile soils, climate control, food, medicine, energy, building materials, transportation, as well as recreational and spiritual uses. Many groups are working to protect endangered species and their habitats.

  4. How can we help protect endangered species? • Protect their habitats permanently in national parks, nature reserves or wilderness areas. There they can live without too much interference from humans. It is also important to protect habitats outside reserves such as on farms and along roadsides. • Some national parks have special guided tours and walks for kids. Talk to the rangers to find out whether there are any threatened species and how they are being protected. You and your friends might be able to help the rangers in their conservation work. • When you visit a national park, make sure you obey the wildlife code: follow fire regulations; leave your pets at home; leave flowers, birds’ eggs, logs and bush rocks where you find them; put your rubbish in a bin or, better still, take it home. • If you have friends who live on farms, encourage them to keep patches of bush as wildlife habitats and to leave old trees standing, especially those with hollows suitable for nesting animals. • Some areas have groups which look after local lands and nature reserves. They do this by removing weeds and planting local native species in their place. You could join one of these groups, or even start a new one with your parents and friends. Ask your local parks authority or council for information. • By removing rubbish and weeds and replanting with natives you will allow the native bush to gradually regenerate. This will also encourage native animals to return.

  5. Endangered Species In Illinois • County: LaSalle • Specific Name: CrotalusHorridus • Common Name: Timber Rattlesnake • # of occurrence: 2 • Last seen: 2000-07

  6. Endangered Species in Illinois • Specific Name: Laniusludovicianus • Common Name: Loggerhead Shrike • Number of occurrence: 1 • Last seen: 1987-07-16

  7. Endangered Species in Illinois • Specific Name: Hemidactyliumscutatum • Common Name: Four-toed Salamander • Number of occurrence: 1 • Last seen: 2006-03-31

  8. Video • http://youtu.be/ze0hkcKj2Ns

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