More then 5 thousand a year die from light pollution.
fish, turtles, birds, and many others because they think it is food. They eat it, and they either choke on it or die because they can't digest it.
there are millions of liver birds u can find out there. the population can always change when some of them died or some of them just born. maybe one day all of them will die if we make more pollution.
More than 20,000 can die with water pollution
Light pollution is generally not life-threatening, but it can easily disrupt a person's sleep cycle if unnecessary light always enter one's house. As far as I am concerned, lack of sleep doesn't cause death but light pollution is a nuisance for drivers in large cities because some lights are so bright that the driver could get "dazzled" by the light - which in tuen can lead to a fatal accident, so in that sense, people CAN die from light pollution.
oil pollution effects on sea otters
Thousands of animal die a day from pollution please
Natural causes, pollution... Natural causes, pollution...
Dead bird bodies are typically found in areas where birds are at risk of collisions, such as near tall buildings, wind farms, and power lines, as well as in areas with high levels of pollution or pesticides. It is also common to find dead bird bodies near sources of artificial light at night, as they can become disoriented and collide with structures or windows.
Mostly birds when they fly over all the smoke so anything that flys over it.
about 6.983 billion
tons because they fly over the smoke that the gas produces Answer: Nobody knows and nobody has a way of calculating the number. Specific bird related death rates are occasionally developed for rare, endangered or "cute" birds, usually after a pollution incident. The general "bird deaths" number has never been calculated.To calculate the number it would be necessary to determine:* Number of birds of all species alive at any given time. * Total mortality rate from all causes (sickness, age, predation, running into buildings, wind power systems) * Percentage attributable in whole or in part to pollution. This is far more than a life's work. Additionally, the data would be changing as fast as you could collect it. . Pollution is massive (consider Global Warming) and local (consider point sources from factories which are only a problem for a small area), and there isn't a good way to get a handle on it in an attempt to effect changes. The problem is just "out there" and bringing it home takes massive effort.
Over 1,000 birds each year die from smashing into windows