Critics of organic agriculture argue that society can not justify being less efficient with arable land in the face of
a rapidly growing human population.
In fact, forecasts for less annual rainfall in years to come have cast uncertainty on the very future of California and
its rapidly growing human population.
The rapidly growing human population can feed itself without worsening climate change by destroying the planet's forests, researchers say.
Protect these four places and the species» future will be reasonably secure, but the Okavango could always dry up in the event of climate change, the Selous is currently managed by sport hunters (a dying industry), the Serengeti is surrounded by
a rapidly growing human population whose offtake of bushmeat is close to the tipping point, and, well, Kruger isn't in the most stable country on earth...
«For instance, there are huge conflict areas in sub-Saharan Africa, because it has vital wildlife habitats but a very
rapidly growing human population that will need more food and more roads.»
Rapidly growing human populations threaten its native habitats.
Not exact matches
Now the entire
human population after the flood
grew rapidly but did not want to fulfill God's command to spread out and fill the earth.
«Is it
human populations growing rapidly once it warms, and hunting?
Earthquakes, tsunamis, and other natural disasters often showcase the worst in
human suffering — especially when those disasters strike
populations who live in
rapidly growing communities in the developing world with poorly enforced or non-existent building codes.
The Earth's
human population is
rapidly growing and the demand for vegetable and livestock production is increasing at the same rate.
With climate change and
growing human population rapidly re-shaping plant distributions, the database called COMPADRE Plant Matrix, will foster collaborations between scientists, said the researchers.
I'm sure you will agree that future
human CO2 emissions will in some way be linked to future
human population growth rates, i.e. if
population grows rapidly humans will emit more CO2 in the future than if
population grows slowly..
Also similar to today, the end - Pleistocene extinction event played out on a landscape where
human population sizes began to
grow rapidly, and when people began to exert extinction pressures on other large animals (Barnosky, 2008; Brook and Barnosky, 2012; Koch and Barnosky, 2006).