Environmental Sciences, asked by souparnak3759, 11 months ago

Observation of wildlife conservation

Answers

Answered by Khushisiwach05
6

Answer:

Wildlife observation is the practice of noting the occurrence or abundance of animal species at a specific location and time,[1] either for research purposes or recreation. A common example of this type of activity is bird watching.

The process of scientific wildlife observation includes the reporting of what (diagnosis of the species), where (geographical location), when (date and time), who (details about observer), and why (reason for observation, or explanations for occurrence). Wildlife observation can be performed if the animals are alive, with the most notable example being face-to-face observation and live cameras, or are dead, with the primary example being the notifying of where roadkill has occurred. 

Answered by jitendrakumar42015
2

Wildlife observation

Explanation:

  • Wildlife observation is the act of taking note of the event or bounty of creature species at a particular area and time, either for inquiring about purposes or entertainment. A typical case of this kind of action is winged animal viewing.  

  • The procedure of logical natural life perception incorporates the announcing of what (finding of the species), where (topographical area), when (date and time), who (insights regarding onlooker), and why (the purpose behind perception, or clarifications for the event).  

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