human–wildlife conflict
0 sources
human–wildlife conflict
Summary
human–wildlife conflict is a type of conflict[1]. It draws 134 Wikipedia views per month (type_of_conflict category, ranking #13 of 28).[2]
Key Facts
- human–wildlife conflict's image is recorded as Human-wildlife conflict.jpg[3].
- human–wildlife conflict's instance of is recorded as type of conflict[4].
- human–wildlife conflict's subclass of is recorded as conflict[5].
- human–wildlife conflict's subclass of is recorded as human-animal relationships[6].
- human–wildlife conflict's NDL Authority ID is recorded as 00573760[7].
- human–wildlife conflict's Commons category is recorded as Human-wildlife conflicts[8].
- human–wildlife conflict's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/047lwx2[9].
- human–wildlife conflict's participant is recorded as human[10].
- human–wildlife conflict's participant is recorded as wild animal[11].
- human–wildlife conflict's has cause is recorded as biological competition[12].
- human–wildlife conflict's has cause is recorded as population growth[13].
- human–wildlife conflict's has cause is recorded as land development[14].
- human–wildlife conflict's has cause is recorded as land use[15].
- human–wildlife conflict's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Human–wildlife conflict[16].
- human–wildlife conflict's has effect is recorded as opportunity cost[17].
- human–wildlife conflict's has effect is recorded as transaction cost[18].
- human–wildlife conflict's BBC Things ID is recorded as 77024928-a59f-48a3-8bc6-64ebde793293[19].
- human–wildlife conflict's name in kana is recorded as じゅうがい[20].
- human–wildlife conflict's Quora topic ID is recorded as Human-Animal-Conflict[21].
- human–wildlife conflict's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 20817334[22].
- human–wildlife conflict's KBpedia ID is recorded as HumanwildlifeConflict[23].
- human–wildlife conflict's OpenAlex ID is recorded as C20817334[24].
- human–wildlife conflict's Encyclopedia of China is recorded as 458295[25].
- human–wildlife conflict's handled, mitigated, or managed by is recorded as animal culling[26].
- human–wildlife conflict's handled, mitigated, or managed by is recorded as translocation[27].
Why It Matters
human–wildlife conflict draws 134 Wikipedia views per month (type_of_conflict category, ranking #13 of 28).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]