Waiting for answer This question has not been answered yet. You can hire a professional tutor to get the answer.
I will pay for the following article Five Environmental Problems Affecting Vietnam. The work is to be 5 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page.
I will pay for the following article Five Environmental Problems Affecting Vietnam. The work is to be 5 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page. Investigating the degree of the ill impact made by these yet unsettled environmental issues on Vietnamese people, it would become essential to treat the studies and assessment thereof with enthusiastic regard.
Through the research conducted by David Dean on the aquaculture of Vietnam, the rapid growth in the production of shrimp, catfish, and lobster is reported to generate detrimental consequences both to the general ecosystem and to humans who take advantage of its resources. As such, aqua-cultural methods bring about nutrient loading of the so-called “grow-out” system in which the food leftovers of the aquatic creatures accumulate in the water causing turbidity, eutrophication, and sedimentation. Hazardous levels of dissolved phosphorus and nitrogen from excrements as well as the pharmaceutical and chemical substances used for developing aquaculture further pollute the body of water and are taken in by the fish which, by food chain, are eaten by men.1 Additionally, when fish become stressed through grow-out settings in aquaculture, disease, and parasites emerge in transmission
between organisms and those that escape inefficient net operations threaten to reduce genetic diversity. Because intensive farming is carried out in cultured shrimp, lobster, and catfish, the clearing of natural habits such as mangrove forests is designed to establish more farms and meet the demands of production in vast numbers. This, nevertheless, has led eventually to the salinization of aquifers and soils, making the freshwater reserves more saline and thus, not conducive for use in crops, human consumption, and certain industrial functions as they suffer from low freshwater quality and amount.
The exploitative approach of deforestation constitutes another issue which designates Vietnam at the height of environmental calamity. According to Do Thanh Hai of the Forest Protection and Management Division, “The illegal exploitation of forests is most common in natural forests, nature reserves and national parks in northern Dien Bien, Bac Kan, Yen Bai, and Lang Son provinces.” There were about 2,400 reported illegal cases of timber trafficking which indicates how substantial the rate of deforestation is as executed by poachers who have had the backing of some local residents despite the presence of the opposing indigenous minorities.