Science, asked by sangeetaabhi77, 10 months ago

Imagine that you are a bird. Write your feelings about the changes in the environment (clean air, fresh water in rivers etc.) in last few months. Pen down some suggestions for humans to maintain this enticing beauty in nature. Also mention some reasons responsible for these changes

Answers

Answered by SillySam
12

My hearts throbs reminiscing the days when the sky was actually blue , the water was fresh , the air was dust less and the land was green . Oh what were the days , when people would fill their pots and keep them on their roofs waiting for me to come and drink it ! With the removal of beauty from the earth , human has also removed humanity from his heart .

Why don't people understand that I'm also a living being that needs life . If you can't give me anything , at least don't take that away from me . Human should understand the irreparable damage that he is doing to mother earth by polluting it . What once was a blue planet , is now a scorched land with dried rivers and barren land !

With deforestation , industrialisation , wars , etc man has taken away the beauty from this Beautiful planet . What you sow , so you reap . Man should understand the loss he did , so should now make some efforts to undo it . He should make development without destroying my house i.e. trees . He should create dams and water systems , without polluting my water source . He should keep in mind that nothing of this nature belongs solely to him . He should understand the value of our lives otherwise that day is not away that my chirrups would fade away from this earth .

Answered by Niharikamishra24
3

Question:-

Imagine that you are a bird. Write your feelings about the changes in the environment (clean air, fresh water in rivers etc.) in last few months. Pen down some suggestions for humans to maintain this enticing beauty in nature. Also mention some reasons responsible for these changes

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might be a little extreme to say that we’d be wading knee-deep in invertebrates if birds disappeared – but maybe not that extreme. A recent study has shown that birds eat 400-500 million tons of insects a year. In China, two-thirds of the diet of House Swift Apus nipalensis consists of agricultural pests, and in forests across the Americas, Evening Grosbeak Hesperiphona vespertina becomes a superhero during outbreaks of Spruce Budworm, providing biological control worth $1,820 per square kilometre. Birds are so efficient that nest boxes have become a pest control practice throughout Europe.

When we think pollinators, bees and butterflies flutter to mind – but bird pollinators such as hummingbirds and honeyeaters also make a big contribution, especially in high altitudes or hot climates. In South Africa, for instance, nearly a quarter of Salvia species are bird-pollinated. Such flowers are lacking in scent, since birds favour sight over smell. Their role as pollinators benefits us directly – around 5% of the plants humans use for food or medicine are pollinated by birds. And when they disappear, the results can be drastic: 31 species of Hawaiian bellflowers appear to have gone extinct along with the birds that pollinated them.

The sight of vultures circling overhead may look foreboding, but it is both their speed of arrival (typically within an hour of death), and their thoroughness which makes them so valuable. It could be days before other less efficient scavengers, such as feral dogs or rats, arrive to pick at the remains, allowing deadly diseases such as rabies and tuberculosis to develop and spread. Over its lifetime, a single vulture provides waste disposal services worth around US$11,600. Following the collapse of Asia’s vultures, India’s feral dog population surged by 5.5 million, spreading rabies and leading to an estimated 47,300 human deaths.

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