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Conserving biodiversity is about genetic variety, species, habitats and ecosystems.

All are important, but it is often most appropriate, practical and effective to focus on species. Some species have obvious public appeal. Species often indicate the health of our environment and can be the easiest and most appropriate level of biodiversity to monitor. Interest in species, such as the bittern, can provide support and impetus for habitat conservation.

They are on the brink of extinction scattered in various zoos of the world; in the wild this species is found in Siberia only and is estimated at 200 animals. Only in 1947, Tiger hunting was prohibited.

Polar bears are a potentially endangered species living in the circumpolar north. They are animals which know no boundaries.

But biologists use a working figure of 20,000 to 25,000 bears with about sixty percent of those living in Canada .

WHITE RHINO
Rhinos once roamed throughout Eurasia and Africa . Today however, very few rhinos now survive outside national parks and reserves. Efforts to protect the rhinos have been severely disrupted because of the ongoing civil war and incursions by poachers coming mainly from Sudan. The survival prospects for this subspecies seem bleak.

ELEPHANTS
Injured and sick elephants are made to work in stressful and oppressive conditions. Demand for ivory, combined with habitat loss from human settlement, has led to a dramatic decline in elephant populations in the last few decades. Elephants need a large amount of habitat because they eat so much. Humans have become their direct competitors for living space. Forest and savanna habitat has been converted to cropland, pastureland for livestock, and timber for housing and fuel.

SHARKS

In recent years, many shark populations have declined dramatically. Sharks have been under increased fishing pressure. Loss of important shark nursery areas in coastal waters due to pollution and development have further aggravated the situation.

WHALES
The retreat of Antarctic sea ice because of global warming will threaten already endangered migratory whales by reducing their feeding areas,

CONSERVATION OF WILDLIFE
The best way to conserve wildlife is through habitat protection. Without habitat to live in, all the captive breeding programs and hunting bans in the world aren't going to make a lick of difference.Fortunately, protecting enough habitat for charismatic megafauna like bears or tigers or caribou to live in will also preserve habitat for a large number of other species with smaller ranges that no one cares about (like insects and plants).

Some steps to take forward in order to :

SAVE ANIMALS

SAY NO TO POACHING :

Save The Natural HABITAT Of The Animals :

More And More National Parks should be built to protect the Animals

Let us Unite together by spreading awareness on this aspect to save this priceless diversity not for ourselves but also for the forthcoming generation ..

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