The recent years have shown just what effect we have had on the planet when it comes to destructing rainforest or the ever-rising ocean. We seem to forget about the impact it has on the species, the environment and even the future generation who are going to inherit this planet. In this essay, we are going to talk about the definition of habitat destruction, the causes, effects and suggest some solutions. You may wonder why should you care. We live in a habitat and we certainly don’t want some species
Chytridiomycosis and Its Effect on North American Anurans Barclay Culp General Seminar, Bio301A 4/5/16 Abstract: Infectious diseases are an issue for many higher level organisms. One such disease is chytridiomycosis caused by the fungus Batrachochytridium dendrobatidis. This review paper seeks to introduce the reader to this organism by giving some necessary background information on the organism. In addition, the paper will discuss the symptoms of chytridiomycosis in both larval and adult anurans infected with
Destructed Environment In Our World The waters turned green, the trees chopped, the clouds turned pink, and so much more due to the way we choose to live. This is a dystopian topic, meaning that the natural world is banished and distrusted. This is a relation to the novel, Fahrenheit 451, written by Ray Bradbury, with the way he describes this world, where the benefits of being a human are flipped around and the world is awful. The eight big ideas in this world he writes about are Thoughts/freedoms
point that some species have probably disappeared from the wild, because of the development of a fungal disease known as chytridiomycosis. This is an infectious disease that affects amphibians worldwide. It is caused by the chytrid fungus (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis), a fungus capable of causing sporadic deaths in some amphibian populations and 100 percent mortality in others. The Chytrid fungus is killing the Panamanian golden frog, a national symbol of good luck, almost to the point that this species
There have been five great mass extinction events in history: Ordovician, Devonian, Permian, Triassic, and Cretaceous. And now, we may be in the middle of a sixth. The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History is a Pulitzer-Prize-winning book by Elizabeth Kolbert. Kolbert uses a comparison between the past and present to assert that we are living in the sixth great mass extinction, only this time humans are the asteroid. It is well-written with a good blend of scientific and common language so that