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Description

Overview:
If you follow environmental news at all, you'll be familiar with the most common cause of extinction in the world today: habitat loss. Habitat destruction threatens the survival of some the world's most charismatic organisms animals like the giant panda, the Sumatran tiger, and the Asian elephant. Humans have encroached on the wilderness in order to farm, mine, log, and build, and in the process, we've pushed the natural inhabitants of those areas into smaller and smaller refuges. Making matters worse, global climate change caused by our production of greenhouse gases is altering the environments within those refuges, forcing species to contend with new challenges. While these might seem like entirely modern problems, recent research indicates that's not the case and that current levels of habitat loss and climate change could have devastating consequences.
Subject:
Biology
Level:
High School, Community College / Lower Division, College / Upper Division
Material Type:
Diagram/Illustration, Reading
Provider:
University of California Museum of Paleontology
Provider Set:
Understanding Evolution
Date Added:
05/01/2012
License:
Some Rights Reserved
Language:
English
Media Format:
Graphics/Photos, Text/HTML

Comments

JC HIDOE on Jun 23, 07:57pm

Nice video on fossils and extinctions that also makes links to why understanding past extinctions could help us nderstand current extinction threats. Nice explanation of hypotheses to test on ancient mass extinctions. Many links to articles that can be useful for CCSS argument standards. HCPS III- SC.BS.5.1

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