Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
There is a clear and concrete relationship between natural resource management, the sustainability of the human population and biodiversity, which is based on the planet's own productive nature, under which natural resources are consumer goods of humanity itself.
Thus, natural resources (which are divided into renewable and non-renewable) must be managed efficiently, in such a way that their scarcity does not occur, since this situation will dramatically affect the quality of life of human beings. There are several examples of this situation, with water scarcity in Africa being one of the most dramatic and obvious. In turn, the sustainability of the human population affects said resource management, since the larger the population, the greater the consumption thereof. The problem is that as a consequence of the excessive population growth of the last century, the extinction of some non-renewable resources has accelerated. Therefore, the control of global population growth is necessary for the sustainability of the production of resources by nature, to avoid the scarcity of them that could produce major economic crises and outbreaks of poverty. Lastly, the overexploitation of resources caused by population growth has begun to affect the different animal and plant species of the different ecosystems of the planet, seriously affecting its biodiversity.