Conservation
in sentence
382 examples of Conservation in a sentence
So I've told you quite a lot about what
conservation
drones are, how you might operate one of these drones, and what a drone could do for you.
I will now tell you where
conservation
drones are being used around the world.
Since then, we've been building drones for our collaborators from around the world, and these include fellow biologists and partners from major
conservation
organizations.
And finally, I would like to show you the latest version of our
conservation
drone.
That is quite sufficient for most of our
conservation
applications.
Now,
conservation
drones began as a crazy idea from two biologists who are just deeply passionate about this technology.
And we believe, strongly believe, that drones can and will be a game changer for
conservation
research and applications.
But at the same time, we've also gotten to know many wonderful colleagues and collaborators who share our vision and see the potential of
conservation
drones.
To us, it is obvious that
conservation
biologists and practitioners should make full use of every available tool, including drones, in our fight to save the last remaining forests and wildlife of this planet.
This kind of carbon mapping has transformed
conservation
and resource policy development.
So in order to put together a
conservation
plan for these unique, important corridors like the western Amazon and the Andes Amazon corridor, we have to start making geographically explicit plans now.
And we could do that by perfectly sensible things like conservation, and wind power, nuclear power and coal to CO2 capture, which are all things that are ready for giant scale deployment, and work.
And there's a role in here for
conservation.
There is no doubt this is the biggest
conservation
opportunity in Africa in decades.
Andy also talks about the fact that our ocean
conservation
movement really grew out of the land
conservation
movement, and in land conservation, we have this problem where biodiversity is at war with food production.
We're living now in an age of what scientists have started to call
"conservation
reliance," and what that term means is that we've disrupted so much that nature can't possibly stand on its own anymore, and most endangered species are only going to survive if we stay out there in the landscape riggging the world around them in their favor.
The line between
conservation
and domestication is blurred.
But in a world of
conservation
reliance, those stories have very real consequences, because now, how we feel about an animal affects its survival more than anything that you read about in ecology textbooks.
They're related, because if we invest heavily in new oil wells, we reduce the incentives for
conservation
of oil in the same way that's going to happen for antibiotics.
That price is telling us that we should no longer take cheap, effective antibiotics as a given into the foreseeable future, and that price is a signal to us that perhaps we need to be paying much more attention to
conservation.
We also need to learn to contextualize our
conservation
messages, so people really understand the true ecosystem value of these creatures.
Part of that we saw and sell, and all the revenue becomes a fund that now funds
conservation
projects of local communities as an endowment fund.
In flight, my observation reveals thousands of plastic white bundles owned by a
conservation
industry that claims it's eco-friendly and recycles millions of tires to preserve people's lives and to improve people's lives.
JG: And lastly, here's Destin, from "Smarter Every Day," talking about the
conservation
of angular momentum, and, since it's YouTube, cats: (Video) Hey, it's me, Destin.
For instance, let me reword this question: How does a cat go from feet-up to feet-down in a falling reference frame, without violating the
conservation
of angular momentum?
And in fact, draining a swamp to make way for agriculture and development was considered the very essence of
conservation
not too long ago.
Now as a
conservation
photographer obsessed with blackwater, it's only fitting that I'd eventually end up in the most famous swamp of all: the Everglades.
It won't happen because they're so ubiquitous, we see them now, they're one of the great
conservation
success stories of the US.
I have dedicated the past 20 years of my life to the research and
conservation
of tapirs in Brazil, and it has been absolutely amazing.
I've been questioning myself about the real contributions I have made for the
conservation
of these animals I love so much.
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