Natural disasters cannot be prevented. What steps can be taken to help make the habitat suitable
for animals to live again?
Answers
Explanation:
Natural disasters are one source of animal harm that wild animals are particularly vulnerable to. Earthquakes, hurricanes, volcanic eruptions, tsunamis, and natural forest fires can have devastating consequences. Even when it would be possible to help them, most animals affected by natural disasters are left to die or to endure debilitating injuries that could have healed with proper treatment. Like wild animals, domesticated animals can also be harmed by natural disasters; however, they are more likely to be rescued.
Animals in the wild
Every year there are about 600 important (according to human standards) natural disasters worldwide in areas inhabited by humans. In addition to extraordinary occurrences, fires and floods occur frequently, and can ravage the earth and jeopardize the lives of animals across the world. From the perspective of nonhuman animals, especially small animals, disasters come harder and faster than they do for humans. For example, heavy rains may cause a river to burst out of its riverbed in a way that is harmless to humans but that causes serious harm to the animals in the area.