Animal losses during disasters aren’t just a side note to human suffering, they reshape ecosystems, devastate livelihoods for farmers and ranchers, and reveal gaps in how disaster planning is done. In recent years, this has led to real changes: better-integrated evacuation plans, wildlife corridors designed with fire and flood risk in mind, and faster-mobilizing animal rescue networks. As natural disasters grow more frequent and intense with a changing climate, accounting for animals isn’t a nice extra. It’s becoming a core part of how communities prepare and respond.

Note: Casualty and displacement figures for wildlife are difficult to measure precisely and are typically ecologists’ best estimates rather than exact counts.


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  2. Introduction to Disaster and Disaster Management
  3. Characteristics of Disaster
  4. Types of Disasters Based on Their Causes/Stimuli
  5. Classification of Disasters Based on Categories
  6. Sudden Catastrophic Impacts of Disasters
  7. Long-Term Impacts and Consequences of Disaster
  8. Financial Management of Disaster Impacts
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