Answer: Look at the explanation below
Explanation: While most of Latin America speaks Spanish, in Haiti, people speak French and Brazil, people speak Portugese. Both nations played a role in getting their independence. Also, the fact that both French and the Portugese exported slaves from West Africa to the West Indies which is what we call the Carribean today.
Hope this clarifies your question.
The largest landlocked harbor in the world is B. San Francisco Bay. It is located in Northern California.
Answer:
Environmental risk can be managed by a number of strategies. The first employed is to prevent pollution at its source because this strategy eliminates the need to dispose of waste, restore habitats, or remediate contamination. In situations where pollution prevention is not possible or practical, then other strategies become important. Minimizing the amount of waste generated and properly disposing of the waste that is generated is one strategy, as is avoiding habitat damage.
Explanation:
edge
ANSWER IS:
A. Artificial translocation of organisms
B. Physical removal of organisms
D. Habitation modification
EXPLANATION:
Natural distributions of biomes are often severely modified by human activities through physical removal, habitat modification and artificial translocation of organisms.
Humans can alter natural distribution patterns astonishingly quickly
Artificial translocation of organisms :
It leads to introduction of exotic species that have an effect on crops and pets
Physical removal of organisms :
Physically organisms are removed by modification of landscape for civilization. It effects overall distribution patterns.
Habitat modification :
Habitat is the natural environment where an organism lives. Human activities are responsible for the alterations in the habitat of many organisms that leads to their extinction.
For example, because of tropical rain forest removal it leads to loss of 27 million acres of rain forest per year.
Ecosystem can also effects from rain forest removal. Biodiversity lost through extinction.