Section 1 - The Endangered Species The Tricarinate Hill Turtle is an endangered species found mostly in Northeastern India, Bangladesh, and Nepal. It is a turtle with a dark brown/maroon shell with a yellowish orange stripe down the middle with a lifespan of about 15 years. Its main diet in the wild is fruit and its fruit of choice is from the downy jasmine plant. In captivity however it is known to eat vegetables and sometimes fish. In terms of the food web, this turtle is a consumer and in the middle of the food chain. It mostly eats the producers from it's biome, and is prey for the larger animals. The population of this species is rapidly decreasing and considered endangered. Melanochelys tricarinata (Tricarinate Hill Turtle) (iucnredlist.org) It's unknown how many are left due to the fact that many are captured and sold into illegal trade, (an estimated 2,000). The females give birth to between 1-6 eggs at a time. Nesting occurs during the...
Section 1: Richard Nixon (1913-1994) was the 37th President of The United States of America. He served for more than five and a half years as president before resigning due to the Watergate Scandal. Although he is remembered strict conservative of the Republican party, Nixon surprisingly made many environmental impacts for our country. The Nixon administration was the first to bring up the environment as a real issue. In his State of the Union address in 1970, Nixon says "It is essential that we take steps to prevent chemical substances from becoming environmental hazards. Unless we develop better methods to assure adequate testing of chemicals, we will be inviting the environmental crisis of the future." - Richard Nixon. (quotefancy.com) President Nixon then drew up a 37-point message on the American environment that included goals ranging from monitoring motor vehicle emissions standards, to halting all dumping in the Great Lakes. Also in 1970, N...
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