Every kind of animal is affected by garbage dumps. It would be most likely be a stray cat, dog or a wild bird.
169 dumps
Vultures are scavengers, and any dead animal is food for them. They will even feed on garbage at dumps.
diarrhoea
Fish, rodents, and sometimes garbage from dumps.
Trash is effecting animals on Earth by: new (unnatural) food they eat in garbage causing new diseases in an area where trash is left causing some animals to choke.Because they try to eat it damaging the natural balance of that ecosystem.
Most garbage dumps have a place where they accept tires.
The most severe problem with garbage is where to put it. There's a huge pile of garbage in the middle of the Pacific Ocean; New York piles it on barges; garbage dumps get compacted and built on (the Shoreline Amphitheater in Mountain View, California, is on a garbage dump and there are tubes in the ground to release the methane, a major cause of Global Warming). We can only recycle and compost so much garbage. Garbage attracts rats and other disease-carrying vermin. Garbage and littering can also cause animals to suffocate. The chemicals in the pollution cause chemicals to rise into the air causing air pollution.
Crows and ravens are omnivores, meaning they eat a variety of foods. In their natural habitat, they primarily feed on insects, small animals, fruits, seeds, and carrion (dead animals). They are also known to scavenge for food in urban areas and garbage dumps.
They may gather at garbage dumps, but are normally solitary, except for females with cubs.
Garbage dumps, sewers and anywhere they can find shelter away from the eyes of people and other predators.
No. A dump doesn't appear without human involvement. Dumps are created by humans, not nature.
polar bears eat fish and seals and anything they can find in the garbage dumps ( in Churchill Manitoba, Canada).