Yes. it comes under the category of conserving species. you use it to describe how to save an endangered specie.
We need to conserve oil
conserve
conserve
If you conserve your electricity, your bill will go down.
The word conserve can be used as a noun or a verb. An adjective is a word that modifies a noun (or pronoun) to make it more specific. The following are adjectives for the word conserve: unconserved, nonconserving, and self-conserving.
The root word is conserve... Conserve - conserved - conserving - conservation - conservational... etc
conserve
CONSERVE
No, the word 'scientific' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun; for example, a scientific experiment, a scientific expedition.
The scientific word for people is homosapiens
protect, save, defend, conserve
No, the noun 'conservation' is a common, abstract, uncountable noun, a word for preservation or restoration from loss, damage, or neglect. A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way. There is no collective noun for the noun 'conservation' because, as an uncountable noun, conservation cannot be grouped.