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WWF works to sustain the natural world for the benefit of people and wildlife, collaborating with partners from local to ...
Beginning in the 1880s, humans built progressively larger diversions, dams, and reservoirs in the Rio Grande Basin, leaving ...
Rural communities living near wildlife areas are the most directly affected by human-wildlife conflict. Wildlife—such as ...
Durante millones de años, estos grandes roedores, conocidos por sus brillantes dientes anaranjados y sus colas planas en ...
The inaugural Forests Forward Impact Report, released today, lands at a critical moment for our planet. In 2024, tropical ...
Thanks to their impressive building skills, beavers are a keystone species—an animal whose activities support its entire ...
Where do red pandas live? Red pandas live in the Eastern Himalayas in places like China, Nepal, and Bhutan. They spend most of their time in trees. Their semi-retractable claws help them move easily ...
Ocean noise, bycatch and climate change are the main threats to the endangered North Atlantic Right Whale. Learn about the ways WWF works to conserve a future where people live in harmony with nature.
The western lowland gorilla is the most numerous and widespread of all gorilla subspecies. But their populations are being threatened by poaching and disease. Learn more about what WWF is doing to ...
Learn about the olive ridley turtle, as well as the threats it faces, what WWF is doing to conserve its future, and how you can help.
In-Depth Deforestation in Peru How indigenous communities, government agencies, nonprofits and businesses work together to stop the clearing of forests ...
Learn about the green sea turtle, as well as the threats this species faces, what WWF is doing to protect its future, and how you can help.