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If extinctions are part of nature's course, then why does it matter that so many species are becoming extinct now?
Over the long course of man's occupancy on Earth has been seemingly, characterized by its dependence on nature and the ecology which has overtime greatly influenced homeostatic regulation, i.e. balance of nature, where clearly, nature's capacity to support man's existence has plummeted with the release of obnoxious chemicals into the environment. It is pertinent to note that all species, while evolving and adapting to the demands of their habitats or modernization exigencies, changes dramatically, subjecting the ecologies, which happen to be the fabric of life to the dynamic swirl of physical forces and of rapid decline of species diversity. If we continue to lose large and vital portions of the natural world to extinction of species and other criticalities, we humans would be able to cope, but plants and animals may not be able to adapt to most of these changes, and as a result may die and become extinct, resulting in a break in food chain.
Over the long course of man's occupancy on Earth has been seemingly, characterized by its dependence on nature and the ecology which has overtime greatly influenced homeostatic regulation, i.e. balance of nature, where clearly, nature's capacity to support man's existence has plummeted with the release of obnoxious chemicals into the environment. It is pertinent to note that all species, while evolving and adapting to the demands of their habitats or modernization exigencies, changes dramatically, subjecting the ecologies, which happen to be the fabric of life to the dynamic swirl of physical forces and of rapid decline of species diversity. If we continue to lose large and vital portions of the natural world to extinction of species and other criticalities, we humans would be able to cope, but plants and animals may not be able to adapt to most of these changes, and as a result may die and become extinct, resulting in a break in food chain.