The pie chart illustrates the primary causes behind changes in the quantity of wild fauna in a local area, while the bar chart indicates these variations across various animal species. By and large, habitat destruction has been the main reason, with most species declining in population.
According to the pie chart, habitat destruction has mainly caused wildlife population changes, with the figure reaching more than four-fifths. Contamination is the second reason, accounting for 21%. Overexploitation like overhunting or overfishing and accidental factors are also the next causes, reaching 15% and 12% respectively.
As illustrated in the bar chart, various animals have seen a significant decline in their number. Particularly, butterflies and bees have suffered from a plummet to around 40% each. However, some wildlife numbers have in fact increased. The bat population has grown by 23% while the numbers of foxes and otters have reached 9% each.
- The charts below show the result of a long term survey carried out by an environmental group into local wildlife population figures
- The diagram below show the production of a lead pencil Summarize the information by selecting and reporting the main features and make comparisons where relevant 78
- The line graph below shows the percentage of tourists to Scotland who visited four different attractions 73
- Information technology enables many people to do their work outside their workplace e g at home when travelling etc Do the benefits of this mobility outweigh the disadvantages 61
- The graph below shows the quantities of goods transported in the UK from 1974 to 2002 by four different modes of transport 84
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