When it comes to habitat destruction, startling events like oil spills and 
deforestation are certain to grab the headlines. Yet as a new study in the 
journal Animal Conservation shows, sometimes habitat destruction can be so 
subtle that it passes under the eyes of all but the most astute scientists. 
David Pike and fellow researchers from the University of Sydney look at the 
case of reptiles in outcrops and find that people moving rocks less than 30 
centimeters out of place can ruin the habitat for species like the endangered 
broad-headed snake that shelter in narrow crevices.  

Read more and comment at 
http://www.esa.org/esablog/conservation/when-habitat-destruction-is-extremely-subtle/.
 

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