Exact(11)
The woodpecker population rebounded.
That was not always the case: in the 1930's there were as few as 25 breeding pairs, but the population rebounded in the 1970's and has flourished.
When an 1873 law made it a crime to slaughter an elk, the population rebounded until they became so strong and voracious that a 1961 management plan for the Owens Valley capped their herds at 100 head.
Pennsylvania's deer population rebounded from roughly one thousand in 1905 to roughly one million in 1928.
With regulations in place and DDT banned, the eagle population rebounded.
The population rebounded slightly after the formation of a breed registry in 1980, but still remains low.
Similar(49)
When confronted with Mr. Beale's reports of a population rebound, Professor Johnson said: "People didn't believe it.
But the expected population rebound never materialized, and the vast majority of casino workers live outside the city.
"In the early 90's there was some hope for what demographers call a population rebound," said Leonard Bloomquist, director of the Population Research Laboratory at Kansas State University in Manhattan.
But the population rebound is most dramatic in America, where the combination of protection and a sparse human population suits them perfectly.
The apparent population rebound resulted from a combination of continued immigration and higher birthrates among the newcomers, along with fewer New Yorkers leaving the city.
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