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 Support the birds, reptiles, mammals, and plants that live
in your neighborhood. You can also attract more wild species by providing water, food, shelter, and privacy. |
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 Explore
habitats
in your area. Help clean up and protect beaches, parks, reserves, and fields where wild plants and animals live. |
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 Find out about environmental organizations in your
area. Maybe you can help care for injured animals, clean up a habitat, or even answer the phone! |
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 If your house pet runs loose it is considered to be an invasive
species .
In the United States alone, it is estimated that 44 million free-roaming cats kill 4.4 million songbirds every day. |
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 Buy things
you really need—not just want—so you don't waste Earth's resources on unnecessary items. Shop for good quality, so you can use toys, clothes,
and supplies many times, then pass them on to someone else. When you travel, avoid buying souvenirs that cost an animal its life
or might have harmed a habitat. |
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 If you choose not to turn
on a light, you save energy. If you reuse a jacket handed down by a brother or sister, you've saved all the resources that would have gone
into a new jacket. When you recycle, you save energy, electricity, water, and many other resources, too. Earth-keepers always remember the
3 Rs! |
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 Watch wild
things, but don't bring them home. Plants and animals often die outside their habitats. Even if they live, they can't reproduce or do their
"jobs" in the natural world. |
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 What you do
and what you buy can affect other people around the world. Learn about other cultures to discover some new ways to help
biodiversity .
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 Kindly show
your friends and family how to take care of the Earth .
Soon, they'll want to be like you! |
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