Concept information
Preferred term
Definition
- Destruction of wildlife habitats by increasing pressure for land by fast-growing human populations, pollution and over-exploitation. Whole species or populations of plants and animals have disappeared causing a loss of genetic resource that is not only regrettable from an aesthetic or philosophical point of view but also threatens man's food supply. Habitat loss takes several forms: outright loss of areas used by wild species; degradation, for example, from vegetation removal and erosion, which deprive native species of food, shelter, and breeding areas; and fragmentation, when native species are squeezed onto small patches of undisturbed land surrounded by areas cleared for agriculture and other purposes.
Broader concept
Narrower concepts
Belongs to group
Belongs to array
In other languages
-
Arabic
-
Armenian
-
Azerbaijani
-
Basque
-
habitat-suntsidura
-
Bulgarian
-
Catalan
-
Chinese (China)
-
Czech
-
Danish
-
Dutch
-
Estonian
-
Finnish
-
French
-
Georgian
-
German
-
Greek
-
Hungarian
-
Icelandic
-
Irish
-
Italian
-
Latvian
-
Lithuanian
-
Maltese
-
Norwegian
-
Polish
-
Portuguese
-
Romanian
-
Russian
-
Slovak
-
Slovenian
-
Spanish
-
Swedish
-
Turkish
-
Ukrainian