动物演讲稿4篇

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本文目录动物演讲稿爱护动物的演讲稿初二作文:非洲野生动物保护宣传演讲稿威廉王子上央视宣传动物保护英语演讲稿

【关于动物的英语演讲稿】

动物演讲稿4篇

hello there~

today i am going to hold a topic about the animals

personally,i am very like animals,beacause i think all the creatures are our friend。

i like lion ,leopard ,tiger,wolf,dog and so on。

i like them especially when they running free,i felt so cool when they running。

lion is my favourite animal ,cause they are strength,powerful and brave ,but quite cute some time。

i dont like snake,i feel afraid and sick of them,indeed ,i thought them is very fearful。

anyway ,i do hope people dont hurt any kinds of animal and be remember :animal is our friend。 we should protect them and take care of them。

thank you for attend my lecture~

【希拉里XX野生动物保护日演讲】

december 4th, XX, will be the first-ever wildlife conservation day. our goal is to inform more people about this global conservation crisis. attacks on rhinos and elephants are multiplying at an alarming rate. species around the globe such as tigers in asia are endangered. by some estimates, the black market for wildlife trafficking is rivaled in size only by the illegal arms and drug trade. the slaughter of endangered species robs communities of income from tourism, reduces biodiversity, encourages corruption, undermines good governance.

XX年12月4日是有史以来第一个野生动物保护日。我们的目标是让更多的人了解这场全球动物保护危机。犀牛和大象越来越频繁地遭到攻击,达到了令人警觉的地步。全世界都有濒危物种,例如亚洲虎。根据一些估计数,遭贩运的野生动物的黑市,其规模只有非法武器和毒品贸易能与之相比。杀戮濒危物种的行径剥夺了有关社区的旅游收入,减少了生物多样性,助长了腐败,破坏了良治。

that's why we are training officials and educating prosecutors about wildlife crimes and helping countries strengthen their enforcement laws. but we can’t do this without you. please, join us. become part of the solution. you have the choice to refuse to purchase products made from endangered wildlife. together we can save these animals before it is too late. stand up and speak out, and stop this trade. visit the website . take the pledge to respect and protect the world’s wildlife.

因此,我们正在就野生动物犯罪问题对官员进行培训,并提高检察官的认知,同时帮助各国加强执法工作。但我们不能没有你们的帮助。请加入我们的行列。为解决这个问题出一份力。你可以选择拒绝购买濒危野生动物制品。我们共同努力便能拯救这些动物,以免为时过晚。挺身而出,大声疾呼,制止这种贸易。请访问网站。作出承诺尊重并保护全世界的野生动物。

爱护动物的演讲稿动物演讲稿(2) | 返回目录

地球是人类、动物、植物的共同家园,目前已知地球上现存的有记载的生物种类有200多万种,我们的世界因为有这些生物而丰富多彩,妙趣横生。

生物学家指出,在自然状态下,物种灭绝的种数与新物种出现的种数基本上是平衡的。但是随着人口的增加和经济的发展,这种平衡已经受到破坏。据专家们估计,从恐龙灭绝以来,当前地球上生物多样性损失的速度比历史上任何时候都快,鸟类和哺乳动物现在的灭绝速度或许是它们在未受干扰的自然界中的100倍甚至1000倍。从16XX年到1996年,世界上消失了164种鸟;从1871年到1970年,兽类灭绝了43种。地球上自有生命以来,共出现过25亿种动植物,其中有将近1/2是在最近3个世纪内消失的。

地球上的生物不可能单独生存,在一定环境条件下,它们是相互联系、共同生活的。 为了保持地球生物的多样性,保护野生动物资源,各个国家都非常重视。1988年我国颁布了《野生动物保护法》。截止到XX年8月,中国国家级自然保护区有303个,其中,在东营市,垦利区和河口区建立了黄河三角洲国家级自然保护区。我国在二十世纪五六十年代就制定了《环境法》,现在它已经迅速发展,趋于成熟。我们应该做些什么呢?我们是不是应该为它而做些什么吗?

我们都是凡人,我们没有拯救世界的力量,但是我们固守着爱与善良,爱护动物是人类的美德,爱护环境是每个人义不容辞的责任。为此,一些城市还建设了流浪动物收容所,让那些无家可归的动物有个温暖的家;建立了关爱动物救基金,让那些失去爱的动物有了生活保障;各种关爱动物的网站也纷纷出台,让更多的人加入关爱动物的大家庭。

大自然是我们的家,善待大自然,从我们身边的小事做起,少用胶袋,节约用水,收取废电池,废品再利用都是大家力所能及的事情。大家勿以事小而不为!

初二作文:非洲野生动物保护宣传演讲稿动物演讲稿(3) | 返回目录

此次旅行之前,我对于野生动物地了解也仅仅局限于伟大的纪录片《动物世界》(其实我觉得之后所有人都会说他对于野生动物的了解也局限于《动物世界》,所以这的确是一篇‘伟大的’纪录片),在这个记录片中,我们所见识到的是狮子猎豹的残忍;是花豹野狐的狡诈;是大自然的恐怖,血淋淋的生存法则。

但现实又一次打破了偏见,非洲之行,带给了我们很多回忆,也带给了我们很多惊讶。这是一次“颠覆”之旅。

如果狮子会像家猫一样卖萌,猎豹歪着个脑袋瞧你,豹宝宝会对着妈妈撒娇,花豹的睡相如西施,诸位看了都自愧不如。其实,在恐怖的利爪下野生动物也有温柔美丽的一面。没有杀戮没有哀嚎。在旱季与雨季交汇的时间里,在温暖和煦、清风阵阵的爱抚下。非洲所展示的的是慵懒,可爱,美丽,和谐。

白天,是美丽的天堂。夜晚,非洲又恢复了它狂野的本性。因为夜色浓重,我们没有机会欣赏到那激动人心的捕猎场景。但夜里低沉怒吼给我们带来了野性的气息。

就是这么一个多姿多彩的非洲,就是这么一些变幻莫测的生灵,如今,却遭到残酷的摧残。

4.9克的铜与铁能做些什么?溶成导电的细丝?做成精美的首饰?还是汽车上的零部件?0。56元人民币又能做些什么?真是幼稚!这一点小钱在当今的社会啥都不算。但是,在这里,他们却被做成夺去生命的恶魔。枪响之后,往往就是另一个生命的陨落。

我不知道那些所谓的象牙筷,象牙印章有什么特别。难道竹筷石印就不好吗?在你手上的,是一个沉甸甸的生命啊!那些你用来买它们的钱上都沾满着鲜血!

其实,野生动物的保护事业说大也不大,说小也不小。它很简单,只是你捐几块钱的事;它很困难,需要你长久的坚持。我们所见到一切都是“生命”,我们所遇到的也会触动人心。作为人类的我们可以主宰一切,但事实上我们是被一切所主宰。因此,我们要对大自然心存敬畏,人类绝对会意识到,再厉害的核武器,再牛逼的超级英雄在愤怒的大自然面前就如狂风中的一粒沙粒,毫无反抗之力。

所以,这不仅仅只是一个演讲,我希望它的作用不止这些。我希望在场的听众,拿起你们的手机,告诉自己的亲朋。告诉他们联合起来一起保护野生动物。请记住:“没有买卖,就没有杀害。”

威廉王子上央视宣传动物保护英语演讲稿动物演讲稿(4) | 返回目录

ladies and gentlemen,

never before have we had so many different ways totalk to one another.

in the distant past, written documents would becarried by hand across thousands of miles from chinato western europe.

today, we access knowledge from all over the world,through our mobile phones, at the tap of a key.

wherever you are watching this programme – whether in this hall, at work, with your friends, orat home with your families;

xièxiè. [thank you.]

hen gaoxing he ni jianmian. [i'm pleased to meet you.]

thank you for welcoming me into your homes.

many of the most important conversations we have in our lives, take place in the family home.

the home is where we learn from our parents and grandparents, teach our own children, andshare our stories and hopes for the future. it is where many of our ideas and values are firstkindled.

in that spirit, there is one subject i believe we have to discuss, around our family tables andacross the generations.

it concerns the future, and i know the chinese are a far-sighted people.

it concerns particularly the environment, and i know that protecting china's rich and beautifulnatural heritage is important to all chinese families.

it is the mass destruction and trafficking of iconic endangered species;

and it is time to talk about the growing human demand for illegal wildlife products that drivesthe trade and makes it profitable.

today, we face an unprecedented surge in the brutal slaughter of iconic animals by poachers.

in south africa, for example, one rhino was killed every month until XX. but last year, threerhinos were killed every single day.

in the 33 years since i was born, we have lost around 70 percent of africa's elephantpopulation. of those that are left, 20,000 are being killed every year – that is 54 elephantskilled every single day.

at this rate, children born this year – like my daughter charlotte – will see the last wildelephants and rhinos die before their 25th birthdays.

those who suffer the most from this loss are some of the poorest people on our planet.

they are the families who feel powerless as the wildlife around them disappear; who face beingtrapped in poverty forever without the income that should be brought in by tourism, acornerstone of the economy in many developing nations.

they are the children whose parents risk their lives in the fight against poachers. in the last fewdays, three rangers and one member of the armed forces were killed by poachers in oneincident in central africa; leaving behind 14 children between them.

it is these children's future that is blighted so tragically by the illegal wildlife trade, and it is their birth right that is stolen.

there is no hiding from these facts today. on our phones, laptops and our tv screens, we can see the images and read the reports that lay bare the truth of this crisis.

that knowledge brings responsibility – the responsibility to do everything in our power to reverse the march towards the eradication of these fine animals.

the good news is that we are far from powerless in this struggle. we can turn the tide of extinction.

we know where the animals we are trying to protect live.

we know many of the roads, the airports and ports criminals use to transport their cargo from killing field to marketplace.

and over the last few years we have seen a groundswell of action by governments to improve their laws and work across borders to fight the traffickers.

only last month, president xi announced that china will take steps to halt the domestic trade in ivory, adding to the ban on ivory carving imports he announced in february.

but we know the illegal wildlife trade cannot be solved by governments alone.

the spotlight falls back on all of us, and on the choices we have to make to play our part in addressing this problem.

we have to accept the truth that consumers are driving the demand for animal body parts, for art, for trinkets, for medicine.

only we as consumers can put the wildlife traffickers out of business, by ending our demand for their products.

i know we can do this.

the desire to possess animal trophies, or ornaments made from ivory, has been felt on every continent for centuries.

i know this topic is sensitive for many families.

for example, until 100 years ago my ancestors were among those who had little concern about acquiring ivory, without the knowledge of the threats of extinction, corruption, and violence that the ivory trade would lead to.

my rejection of ivory today is not a judgement ofpast generations. it is an acceptance of the world asi find it today and the world i want my children,george and charlotte, to inherit.

likewise, those doctors and medical practitioners inchina that are speaking out against the use ofendangered species in medicine, they are notjudging previous generations who did not have thefacts that you do today. they are just accepting thetruth that all credible evidence and scientific research shows, for example, that rhino horncannot cure cancer.

we have a responsibility to act on the facts we have today. by doing so we are honouring thegenerations that have come before us and we are protecting those that are yet to come.

i do not think that any of us would stand and watch an elephant or rhino being killed – or aranger being gunned down – because we wanted a bracelet or an ornament to impresssomeone else as a gift.

but that is what the demand for wildlife products means in practice.

the decisions we make as consumers affect the lives of ordinary people thousands of thousandsof miles away, in countries we may never visit.

if we buy illegal wildlife products, we are contributing to the extinction of whole species.

but there is good news, and if you remember one thing, i want you to remember this: we canwin this battle.

each generation decides what it values.

each generation can determine what we consider to be beautiful on the one hand, orunacceptable or immoral on the other.

we can act in solidarity with those fighting poaching and trafficking in their communities.

i am absolutely convinced that china can become a global leader in the protection ofwildlife.

your influence in the world means you can change the face of conservation in this century.

this would be a contribution that would go down in history, one that your great grandchildrenwould speak of with great pride.

the greatest inheritance we can pass on to the next generation is a safe and sustainableenvironment: the priceless endowment of nature.

let us not tell our children the sad tale of how we watched as the last elephants, rhinos andtigers died out, but the inspiring story of how we turned the tide and preserved them for allhumanity.

and in so doing, let us show the world that by working together we can stand up to the greatchallenges our planet and our families will face in the generations to come.

xièxiè. [thank you.]