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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page discussion of so-called nuisance wildlife. The author emphasizes that nuisance wildlife, in reality, is displaced wildlife. They have been displaced not through any action of their own but by the actions of humans. Until we change those actions nuisance wildlife is indeed a problem that will not go away. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPwldlfN.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
continues to grow in astronomical leaps and bounds we find an imperiled planet, a planet that without a drastic change which is sure to become toxic to not only human
life but most other forms of life. Our exploding population has led to many problems in fact. These problems include the depletion of our resources as a result
of the heavy demands we place upon them as part of our energy-intensive lifestyles and the pollution to other resources as a result of those same lifestyles. We are
experiencing ozone depletion, water and air pollution and congestion as we have never experienced it before. Our activities are causing problems in one regard after another. One of
these problems is nuisance wildlife. Many regard problems such as ozone depletion and water and air pollution as far removed from their every
day lives. They read about them in news accounts but seldom give them much thought. Closer to home, however, is the cute little squirrel that lives in the
big oak tree outside our door, or at least the cute little squirrel that used to live in that oak tree. The power line company came in and topped the
oak to clear its branches for the new subdivision that was developing across the street. Then, when the road expanded to handle the increased traffic the state forcibly took
an easement on the strip of property that the oak was on. The oak is now long gone but the squirrel, or at least its descendants are still there.
Now, however, the squirrels are trying to encroach on the attics of the houses in the subdivision. As one wildlife expert has observed:
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