Why is the Division of Boating & Ocean Recreation encouraging neuter / return practitioners to relocate cats to potentially much
more sensitive habitats?
Not exact matches
Today we are increasing our commitment to protect even
more sensitive fish
habitat in the future.
«These species were highly
sensitive to the changing
habitat and therefore
more likely to disappear in landscapes that encompass only a small proportion of intact forest.»
Here we see that the conclusion is «The influx of subsidized cats to natural
habitats, combined with their high vagility and low trappability, makes TNR an unlikely solution for controlling feral cats on a large, rugged island like Catalina and,
more generally, in other locations where human populations abut ecologically
sensitive areas.»
The influx of subsidized cats to natural
habitats, combined with their high vagility and low trappability, makes TNR an unlikely solution for controlling feral cats on a large, rugged island like Catalina and,
more generally, in other locations where human populations abut ecologically
sensitive areas.
I think environmental educators, myself included, need to be
more careful,
sensitive, and consistent in their explanations of
habitat restoration.
You may also have learned about the connection between the decline of the shark population and the burning and dredging of
more coal near their
sensitive habitats.
More recently, Governor Schwarzenegger issued Executive Orders in 2008 and 2009 that established the Renewable Energy Action Team to develop a plan for renewable development in
sensitive desert
habitat, accelerated the Renewables Portfolio Standard requirement to 33 percent by 2020, and directed the Air Resources Board to adopt regulations by July 31, 2010, to meet that requirement.
Many unanswered questions exist regarding the impacts of wind development on wildlife in these
sensitive habitats and it may take years to
more fully understand.
Second, some mammals seem
more vulnerable to
habitat loss than others: insect - eating mammals — like anteaters, armadillos and some primates, are the first to disappear — while other groups, like herbivores, seem to be less
sensitive.»