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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 ...
WWF works to sustain the natural world for the benefit of people and wildlife, collaborating with partners from local to global levels in nearly 100 countries.
Durante millones de años, estos grandes roedores, conocidos por sus brillantes dientes anaranjados y sus colas planas en ...
Watch this episode to learn how Native Nations are leading efforts to restore buffalo populations, reclaim food sovereignty, and heal the land.
Thanks to their impressive building skills, beavers are a keystone species—an animal whose activities support its entire ...
The inaugural Forests Forward Impact Report, released today, lands at a critical moment for our planet. In 2024, tropical ...
As more people experience the impacts of climate change through water, from too much or too little rainfall and snowmelt. This can lead droughts or floods and impact people and nature everywhere.
In October 2024, we invited Food Waste Warriors to create a poster or piece of digital media that focuses on the topic of reducing food waste in school cafeterias. We asked that the artwork showcase: ...
What a year it’s been. 2024 held plenty of hard news for nature, but there were also notable wins. Those successes deserve to be celebrated!
WWF report reveals how wild species are essential for human survival. Learn why biodiversity loss threatens our food, climate, and economies, and what action is needed.