The bachelor thesis is focused on the decline of small game mammals and small game birds in the current agrarian country. What was a natural thing 50 years ago, today it needs attention. With the content of this bachelor thesis I would like to point out how breeding and care for small game is declining today thanks to us – people and to the dominant large game, that is stepping into foreground on the whole territory of Slovakia. At the beginning of the bachelor thesis I focus on the analysis of the issue of small game, its habitat and biology. The following point analyses the natural conditions in Slovakia and especially on the Danubian Lowland and points to biotic factors that greatly affect the life of small game.The thesis also includes a description of the cadastral area in which the researched area is located. The aforementioned area in my bachelor thesis is specifically the cadastral area of the village Hronovce, located in the district of Levice.The main reason for writing this bachelor thesis is to draw people’s attention and point them out the rapid decline I would venture to say disappearance, of the hare and the pheasant from our nature. At the same time I would like to highlight the causes that have largely contributed and still contribute to the extinction of small game. I think that the main causes of the extinction of the hare and the pheasant are farmers and their way of planning.In the next part I focus on a specific area, where I researched and compared the averages of spring game population from 1997 up to the present. The diagram shows a significant decline of small game in the given area.I kept the most important chapter to the ending of the thesis, which might save the existence of small game on our territory. It is the improvement of living conditions of small game in an agrarian country. It involves reduction of agricultural crops, bringing a little green vegetation, such as bio-belts, groves, windbreaks, fields for small game to revive those monotonous hundreds of hectares of corn and wheat.It is already well known among hunters that a partridge in the wild is rarer to see than a capital deer. Do we really want this fate to follow the pheasant and the hare? If so, we are on the right path.