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  1. Habitat loss, in ecology, the reduction or elimination of the space in which a species or community of organisms lives and reproduces.
    www.britannica.com/science/habitat-loss
    Habitat destruction (also termed habitat loss and habitat reduction) occurs when a natural habitat is no longer able to support its native species. The organisms once living there have either moved to elsewhere or are dead, leading to a decrease in biodiversity and species numbers.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habitat_destruction
    Habitat loss refers to the reduction in the amount of space where a particular species, or group of species can survive and reproduce. Habitat loss is a consequence of human activities such as agriculture, urbanization, deforestation, resource extraction, alteration of the sea-floor due to trawling (fishing), or the release of pollutants.
    ugc.berkeley.edu/background-content/habitat-loss-…
  2. People also ask
    Habitat loss affects the most species, with the conversion of habitats into farmland thought to impact around 77% of amphibians overall. It’s thought to be responsible for the extinction of the Jalpa false brook salamander, which disappeared after logging and cattle grazing destroyed the Guatemalan forests it called home.
    • World-leading study, State of Nature, finds no let-up in the decline of our wildlife, with one in six species at risk of being lost from Great Britain . • State of Nature, the most comprehensive report on UK wildlife, also shows that the species studied have, on average, declined by 19% in the UK since monitoring began in 1970.
    The 2023 State of Nature report shows that the abundance of species studied in the UK has declined by 19 per cent on average since records began in 1970. But while the most important natural habitats are in poor condition, work to protect landscapes has clear benefits for nature, people and climate.
    As a result, due to human activity the UK now has less than half of its biodiversity remaining. The evidence from the last 50 years, presented in the State of Nature report, shows that the intensive way in which we manage our land for farming and the continuing effects of climate change, are the two biggest drivers of nature loss.
  3. Conservation slowing biodiversity loss, scientists say - BBC

  4. Landmark report shows UK wildlife’s devastating decline

  5. Landmark study definitively shows that conservation actions are ...

  6. Over £25 million to preserve wildlife-rich habitats in England

  7. State of Nature 2023 - National Biodiversity Network

  8. State of Nature report 2023 | National Trust

  9. Nature crisis: One in six species at risk of extinction in Great ... - BBC

  10. Current conservation policies risk accelerating …

    Web21 June 2023. Current conservation policies risk accelerating biodiversity loss. Three approaches that aim to cut the harms of agriculture — land sharing, rewilding and organic farming — risk...

  11. Bird vulnerability to forest loss | Nature Ecology & Evolution

  12. Climate change threatens thousands of amphibians with extinction ...