Thanks to rehabilitation efforts and legal protection, whooping cranes' populations have stabilized but they remain a severely threatened species. The one truly wild band of whooping cranes that summers in the Wood Buffalo Park in the Northwest Territories has a stable or slowly increasing population. Efforts to reintroduce cranes along the eastern flyway are based primarily in Wisconsin at the Necedah Wildlife Refuge; there is a small but slowly growing population.
No, they are actually slowly increasing, nearly 500 in the wild.
There are around 350 in the wild, still on the trail to recovery.
Numbats are still endangered, with a population trend that is decreasing.
Still growing, but the growing speed is slowing down
All I can tell you is the whooping crane was once on the verge of extinction, but have rebounded to a wild population of over 350 birds. They are still listed as endangered, as their numbers recover. The question was incomplete, please ask again if you need more info.
Yea the whooping choung (Bordetella pertussis) as it is scientifically called is still in existance it it a respatory infection that causes vomiting spasams and shapr, shrill inhaling
First of all, there are no great epidemics of whooping cough at present, so people do not worry about it very much, although the disease does still exist. And secondly, many people believe that vaccines are dangerous, and they would rather take their chances with whooping cough.
Yes, but i think that the number is decreasing.
Yes, but they are recovering. Once down to 25 birds, they now number in the hundreds but are still protected by law.
An object can slow down and still have acceleration if its velocity is decreasing but not necessarily reaching zero. Acceleration is a vector quantity, so it can be negative if it is in the opposite direction of the velocity. In this case, the object is still accelerating even though its speed is decreasing.
Japanese cranes are endangered primarily due to habitat loss caused by agricultural expansion, urban development, and infrastructure projects that disrupt their breeding and feeding grounds. Additionally, changes in land use and climate change affect the wetlands they rely on. Conservation efforts are ongoing, but these cranes still face threats from poaching and human disturbance. The combination of these factors has led to a significant decline in their population.
Because the growth rate refers to the percentage increase - from 2 to 4 is a 100% increase, while for example 1,000,000 + 20,000 new babies is only an increase of 2%.