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Habitat Conservation

Coral reef landscape with land and trees in the background. Photo source: Burt Jones and Maurine Shimlock, Secret Sea Visions, Inc.
With support from USAID, communities in
Indonesia have adopted coastal zone
management plans, benefiting coral reefs
and fish biodiversity.
A habitat is the place a plant or animal lives. Habitats are as diverse as the plants and animals that live in them, ranging from the driest deserts, to the tropical rainforest, to the arctic tundra and coral reefs. Most plants and animals are uniquely adapted to survive in a specific habitat, and if that habitat is destroyed, the plant or animal’s survival is severely threatened.

Unfortunately, human pressures such as logging, agriculture, fishing, and pollution negatively impact important habitats, including tropical rainforests, coral reefs, grasslands, and the highly productive areas of the open sea. As habitats are degraded, the species that depend upon them are endangered or driven to extinction.

For the Earth’s rich biodiversity to survive, these important habitats must be conserved.

USAID supports efforts to conserve important habitats including:

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Tue, 27 Feb 2007 10:29:01 -0500
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