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Significations et usages de wildlife

Définition

wildlife (n.)

1.taxonomic kingdom comprising all living or extinct animals

2.the natural physical world including plants and animals and landscapes etc."they tried to preserve nature as they found it"

3.all living things (except people) that are undomesticated"chemicals could kill all the wildlife"

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Définition (complément)

⇨ voir la définition de Wikipedia

Synonymes

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Voir aussi

wildlife (n.)

natural

Locutions

Alamosa National Wildlife Refuge • Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center • Aleutian Islands National Wildlife Refuge • Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge • Anaho Island National Wildlife Refuge • Aransas National Wildlife Refuge • Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge • Arcata Wastewater Treatment Plant and Wildlife Sanctuary • Arctic National Wildlife Refuge • Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge • BBC Wildlife • BBC Wildlife (magazine) • Baca National Wildlife Refuge • Back Bay National Wildlife Refuge • Baisipali Wildlife Sanctuary • Bamforth National Wildlife Refuge • Benton Lake National Wildlife Refuge • Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire Wildlife Trust • Bhitarkanika Wildlife Sanctuary • Black Coulee National Wildlife Refuge • Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge • Bon Secour National Wildlife Refuge • Bondla Wildlife Sanctuary • Bowdoin National Wildlife Refuge • Boyer Chute National Wildlife Refuge • Browns Park National Wildlife Refuge • Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge • Cahaba River National Wildlife Refuge • Cam Valley Wildlife Group • Cap Tourmente National Wildlife Area • Cape May National Wildlife Refuge • Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge • Chautauqua National Wildlife Refuge • Chimfunshi Wildlife Orphanage • Cokeville Meadows National Wildlife Refuge • College of African Wildlife Management • Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats • Coringa Wildlife Sanctuary • Cornwall Wildlife Trust • Cotigao Wildlife Sanctuary • Creedman Coulee National Wildlife Refuge • Crescent Lake National Wildlife Refuge • Currumbin Wildlife Sanctuary • Dartmoor wildlife • De Wildt Cheetah and Wildlife Centre • DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge • Defenders of Wildlife • Department of Wildlife and National Parks • Derbyshire Wildlife Trust • Desert National Wildlife Refuge Complex • Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge • Driftless Area National Wildlife Refuge • Edward R. Madigan State Fish and Wildlife Area • Edwards Run Wildlife Management Area • Eufaula National Wildlife Refuge • Fern Cave National Wildlife Refuge • Fort Mill Ridge Wildlife Management Area • Fort Niobrara National Wildlife Refuge • Gahirmatha Marine Wildlife Sanctuary • Gerald Durrell Endemic Wildlife Sanctuary • Govind Pashu Vihar Wildlife Sanctuary • Hailstone National Wildlife Refuge • Halfbreed Lake National Wildlife Refuge • Hampshire and Isle of Wight Wildlife Trust • Hazaribag Wildlife Sanctuary • Hazaribagh Wildlife Sanctuary • Hewitt Lake National Wildlife Refuge • Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park • Hutton Lake National Wildlife Refuge • Indira Gandhi Wildlife Sanctuary and National Park • Jaisamand Wildlife Sanctuary • Jaldapara Wildlife Sanctuary • Jim Edgar Panther Creek State Fish and Wildlife Area • John and Louise Seier National Wildlife Refuge • Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources • Key Cave National Wildlife Refuge • Kilauea Point National Wildlife Refuge • Klamath Basin National Wildlife Refuge Complex • Koshi Tappu Wildlife Reserve • Kumbhalgarh Wildlife Sanctuary • Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge • Lake Mason National Wildlife Refuge • Lake Thibadeau National Wildlife Refuge • Lamesteer National Wildlife Refuge • Leaf River Wildlife Management Area • Lee Metcalf National Wildlife Refuge • Lindsay Wildlife Museum • List of California Channel Islands wildlife • List of National Wildlife Areas in Canada • List of West Virginia wildlife management areas • List of Wildlife Refuges of the Lower Colorado River Valley • List of national parks and wildlife sanctuaries of Gujarat, India • Little Pend Oreille National Wildlife Refuge • Lost Trail National Wildlife Refuge • Lower Suwannee National Wildlife Refuge • Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife • Mahadeyi Wildlife Sanctuary • Mahaveer Wildlife Sanctuary • Marwell Wildlife • Mauritian Wildlife Foundation • McFaddin and Texas Point National Wildlife Refuges • Medicine Lake National Wildlife Refuge • Michigan Islands National Wildlife Refuge • Moapa Valley National Wildlife Refuge • Monte Vista National Wildlife Refuge • Mortenson Lake National Wildlife Refuge • Mount Abu Wildlife Sanctuary • Nathaniel Mountain Wildlife Management Area • National Fish and Wildlife Forensics Laboratory • National Parks and Wildlife Service • National Wildlife Refuge System • National Wildlife Refuge System Administration Act of 1966 • Netravali Wildlife Sanctuary • Neyyar Wildlife Sanctuary • Ninepipe National Wildlife Refuge • Nisqually National Wildlife Refuge • Norfolk Wildlife Trust • North Platte National Wildlife Refuge • Noxubee National Wildlife Refuge • Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge • Ouray National Wildlife Refuge • Pablo National Wildlife Refuge • Pahranagat National Wildlife Refuge • Pathfinder National Wildlife Refuge • Patuxent Wildlife Research Center • Paul J. Rainey Wildlife Sanctuary • Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge • Pinckney Island National Wildlife Refuge • Planet Eart (wildlife series) • Planet Earth (wildlife documentary) • Queensland Wildlife Sanctuaries • Ragged Island Wildlife Refuge • Red Rock Lakes National Wildlife Refuge • Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge • Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge • Sabine National Wildlife Refuge • Saddle Mountain National Wildlife Refuge • Saddle Mountain Wildlife Refuge • San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge • Santee National Wildlife Refuge • Scottish Wildlife Trust • Seedskadee National Wildlife Refuge • Seney National Wildlife Refuge • Shivaram Wildlife Sanctuary • Short Mountain Wildlife Management Area • Society of Wildlife Artists • St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge • Suffield National Wildlife Area • Sussex Wildlife Trust • Swan River National Wildlife Refuge • Tabin Wildlife Reserve • Tamor Pingla Wildlife Sanctuary • Teenage Wildlife • Tees Valley Wildlife Trust • The College of African Wildlife Management, Mweka • The Jug Wildlife Management Area • The Living Desert Wildlife and Botanical Gardens • The Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire and Peterborough • The Wildlife Trusts • Thol Wildlife Sanctuary • Tosohatchee Wildlife Management Area • Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuge • Two Ponds National Wildlife Refuge • UL Bend National Wildlife Refuge • United States Fish and Wildlife Service • Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife and Fish Refuge • Urban Wildlife Network • Urban Wildlife Partnership • Urban Wildlife Trust • Valentine National Wildlife Refuge • Vernon/Wildlife Water Aerodrome • Vic Fazio Yolo Wildlife Area • War Horse National Wildlife Refuge • Watching the Wildlife • Watercress Darter National Wildlife Refuge • Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge • Wildlife Conservation • Wildlife Conservation Act 1950 • Wildlife Conservation Society • Wildlife Prairie State Park • Wildlife Preservation Canada • Wildlife Safari • Wildlife Trust (US) • Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire and Peterborough • Wildlife Trust for Lancashire, Manchester and North Merseyside • Wildlife WayStation • Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 • Wildlife art • Wildlife contraceptive • Wildlife garden • Wildlife management • Wildlife of Costa Rica • Wildlife of Kerala • Wildlife on One • Wildlife photography • Wildlife sanctuaries of India • Wildlife totemization • Wynad Wildlife Sanctuary • Yorkshire Wildlife Trust

Dictionnaire analogique

Wikipedia

Wildlife

                   
  A Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) surfs the wave of a research boat on the Banana River, near the Kennedy Space Center – an example of wildlife.

Wildlife includes all non-domesticated plants, animals and other organisms. Domesticating wild plant and animal species for human benefit has occurred many times all over the planet, and has a major impact on the environment, both positive and negative.

Wildlife can be found in all ecosystems. Deserts, forests, rain forests, plains, grasslands, and other areas including the most developed urban sites, all have distinct forms of wildlife. While the term in popular culture usually refers to animals that are untouched by human factors, most scientists agree that wildlife around the world is impacted by human activities.

Humans have historically tended to separate civilization from wildlife in a number of ways including the legal, social, and moral sense. This has been a reason for debate throughout recorded history. Religions have often declared certain animals to be sacred, and in modern times concern for the natural environment has provoked activists to protest the exploitation of wildlife for human benefit or entertainment. Literature has also made use of the traditional human separation from wildlife.

Contents

  Food, pets, traditional medicines

Anthropologists believe that the Stone Age peoples and hunter-gatherers relied on wildlife, both plants and animals, for their food. In fact, some species may have been hunted to extinction by early human hunters. Today, hunting, fishing, or gathering wildlife is still a significant food source in some parts of the world. In other areas, hunting and non-commercial fishing are mainly seen as a sport or recreation, with the edible meat as mostly a side benefit.[citation needed] Meat sourced from wildlife that is not traditionally regarded as game is known as bush meat. The increasing demand for wildlife as a source of traditional food in East Asia is decimating populations of sharks, primates, pangolins and other animals, which they believe have aphrodisiac properties.

In November 2008, almost 900 plucked and "oven-ready" owls and other protected wildlife species were confiscated by the Department of Wildlife and National Parks in Malaysia, according to TRAFFIC. The animals were believed to be bound for China, to be sold in wild meat restaurants. Most are listed in CITES (the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora) which prohibits or restricts such trade.

Malaysia is home to a vast array of amazing wildlife. However, illegal hunting and trade poses a threat to Malaysia’s natural diversity.

—Chris S. Shepherd[1]

A November 2008 report from biologist and author Sally Kneidel, PhD, documented numerous wildlife species for sale in informal markets along the Amazon River, including wild-caught marmosets sold for as little as $1.60 (5 Peruvian soles).[2] Many Amazon species, including peccaries, agoutis, turtles, turtle eggs, anacondas, armadillos, etc., are sold primarily as food. Others in these informal markets, such as monkeys and parrots, are destined for the pet trade, often smuggled into the United States. Still other Amazon species are popular ingredients in traditional medicines sold in local markets. The medicinal value of animal parts is based largely on superstition.

  Religion

Many wildlife species have spiritual significance in different cultures around the world, and they and their products may be used as sacred objects in religious rituals. For example, eagles, hawks and their feathers have great cultural and spiritual value to Native Americans as religious objects.

  Media

  The Douglas Squirrel (Tamiasciurus douglasii) is an example of wildlife.

Wildlife has long been a common subject for educational television shows. National Geographic specials appeared on CBS beginning in 1965, later moving to ABC and then PBS. In 1963, NBC debuted Wild Kingdom, a popular program featuring zoologist Marlin Perkins as host. The BBC natural history unit in the UK was a similar pioneer, the first wildlife series LOOK presented by Sir Peter Scott, was a studio-based show, with filmed inserts. It was in this series that David Attenborough first made his appearance which led to the series Zoo Quest during which he and cameraman Charles Lagus went to many exotic places looking for elusive wildlife—notably the Komodo dragon in Indonesia and lemurs in Madagascar. Since 1984, the Discovery Channel and its spin off Animal Planet in the US have dominated the market for shows about wildlife on cable television, while on PBS the NATURE strand made by WNET-13 in New York and NOVA by WGBH in Boston are notable. See also Nature documentary. Wildlife television is now a multi-million dollar industry with specialist documentary film-makers in many countries including UK, US, New Zealand NHNZ, Australia, Austria, Germany, Japan, and Canada. There are many magazines which cover wildlife including National Wildlife Magazine, Birds & Blooms, Birding (magazine), and Ranger Rick (for children).

  Tourism

Fuelled by media coverage and inclusion of conservation education in early school curriculum, Wildlife tourism & Ecotourism has fast become a popular industry generating substantial income for developing nations with rich wildlife specially, Africa and India. This ever growing and ever becoming more popular form of tourism is providing the much needed incentive for poor nations to conserve their rich wildlife heritage and its habitat.

  Destruction

  Map of early human migrations, according to mitochondrial population genetics. Numbers are millennia before the present.

This subsection focuses on anthropogenic forms of wildlife destruction.

Exploitation of wild populations has been a characteristic of modern man since our exodus from Africa 130,000 – 70,000 years ago. The rate of extinctions of entire species of plants and animals across the planet has been so high in the last few hundred years it is widely considered that we are in the sixth great extinction event on this planet; the Holocene Mass Extinction.

Destruction of wildlife does not always lead to an extinction of the species in question, however, the dramatic loss of entire species across Earth dominates any review of wildlife destruction as extinction is the level of damage to a wild population from which there is no return.

The four most general reasons that lead to destruction of wildlife include overkill, habitat destruction and fragmentation, impact of introduced species and chains of extinction.[3]

  Overkill

Overkill happens whenever hunting occurs at rates greater than the reproductive capacity of the population is being exploited. The effects of this are often noticed much more dramatically in slow growing populations such as many larger species of fish. Initially when a portion of a wild population is hunted, an increased availability of resources (food, etc.) is experienced increasing growth and reproduction as Density dependent inhibition is lowered. Hunting, fishing and so on, has lowered the competition between members of a population. However, if this hunting continues at rate greater than the rate at which new members of the population can reach breeding age and produce more young, the population will begin to decrease in numbers.

Populations are confined to islands, whether literal islands or just areas of habitat that are effectively an “island” for the species concerned have also been observed to be at greater risk of dramatic population declines following unsustainable hunting.

  Habitat destruction and fragmentation

  Deforestation and increased road-building in the Amazon Rainforest are a significant concern because of increased human encroachment upon wild areas, increased resource extraction and further threats to biodiversity.

The habitat of any given species is considered its preferred area or territory. Many processes associated human habitation of an area cause loss of this area and decrease the carrying capacity of the land for that species. In many cases these changes in land use cause a patchy break-up of the wild landscape. Agricultural land frequently displays this type of extremely fragmented, or relictual, habitat. Farms sprawl across the landscape with patches of uncleared woodland or forest dotted in-between occasional paddocks.

Examples of habitat destruction include grazing of bushland by farmed animals, changes to natural fire regimes, forest clearing for timber production and wetland draining for city expansion.

  Impact of introduced species

Mice, cats, rabbits, dandelions and poison ivy are all examples of species that have become invasive threats to wild species in various parts of the world[citation needed]. Frequently species that are uncommon in their home range become out-of-control invasions in distant but similar climates. The reasons for this have not always been clear and Charles Darwin felt it was unlikely that exotic species would ever be able to grow abundantly in a place in which they had not evolved. The reality is that the vast majority of species exposed to a new habitat do not reproduce successfully. Occasionally, however, some populations do take hold and after a period of acclimation can increase in numbers significantly, having destructive effects on many elements of the native environment of which they have become part.

  Chains of extinction

This final group is one of secondary effects. All wild populations of living things have many complex intertwining links with other living things around them. Large herbivorous animals such as the hippopotamus have populations of insectivorous birds that feed off the many parasitic insects that grow on the hippo. Should the hippo die out, so too will these groups of birds, leading to further destruction as other species dependent on the birds are affected. Also referred to as a Domino effect, this series of chain reactions is by far the most destructive process that can occur in any ecological community.

Another example is the black drongos and the cattle egrets found in India. These birds feed on insects on the back of cattle, which helps to keep them disease-free. If we destroy the nesting habitats of these birds, it will cause a decrease in the cattle population because of the spread of insect-borne diseases.

  See also

  References

  1. ^ TRAFFIC: the wildlife trade monitoring network
  2. ^ Veggie Revolution: Monkeys and parrots pouring from the jungle[self-published source?]
  3. ^ Diamond, J. M. (1989). Overview of recent extinctions. Conservation for the Twenty-first Century. D. Western and M. Pearl. New York, Oxford University Press: 37-41.

  External links

   
               

 

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