extentions? when u get hair added to your hair to make it longer..kindof like weave lol
Some of the effects on the environment is that the fires will sometimes take plants on the brink of extenction and we will lose them forever because they may not have been able to drop there seeds. With this brings exotic weeds into the picture which usually die off during fire season making the area more prone to fire and the damage to residents.
There are many problems encountered during the rearing of sheep. Grazing can turn out to be a problem as the shepherds or sheep dogs may not be as careful as necessary. During the process of shearing, it may become difficult with the tiny insects in the body. In fact, skin diseases and other problems may occur.
people lose there homes ,animals are killed and also lose their vegetation,affects the air quality,the wild and heat.the good that wildfires do is they burn old dead trees ,leaves grass ,andanything else.
Because they possess blubbler that is used in your every-day chapstick and because if we do not make any effort to save them, they shall die out and soon many products that depend on their species will become deffective; plus, the aquatic food chain will become disturbed as the cause of their extenction resulting in no "Shamus" or "Free Willy's" anymore for future generations. They will not be able to enjoy their amazing features/characteristics... So, make an effort and try, the 3 r's: recycle, reuse, reduce. You can also try to save water because we may be saving habitats to become cleaner to make many species healthier and have a happier & easier lifestyle for themselves. We benifit from their many qualities, you may not realize it, but they affect our every-day lives, without them, we will add onto the world's list of problems.
There is a story that the Komodo dragon was only discovered after WW1, when an aircraft came down in the waters around the islands, and the surviving pilot swam to Komodo Island. This is not quite true. It is unknown when, exactly, the Komodo dragon was discovered, but the earliest reports seem to be from around 1910-1912, and they came from pearlers and fishermen. The existence of the Komodo dragon was not actually verified until 1926, when W. Douglas Burden, representing the American Museum of Natural history, led an expedition to Komodo, and returned with 12 preserved specimens and 2 living komodo dragons.