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WWF invites you to a special look into the development of a technology-driven monitoring system for mangrove conservation in ...
WWF-Bolivia, with support from the Wildlife Adaptation Innovation Fund, is constructing 10 artificial watering holes for ...
The brown bear is one of Europe’s most iconic and culturally significant species, playing a huge role in European culture, ...
Madre de Dios, a region in southeastern Peru known as the country’s biodiversity capital, covers 19.3 million acres (7.8 ...
Today, at the third UN Ocean Conference, and ahead of the upcoming UN Plastic Treaty negotiations (INC 5.2), co-host France ...
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.
Currently, the law that protects endangered species, the Endangered Species Act (ESA), makes it clear that destroying habitat ...
WWF-Malaysia’s holistic landscape conservation project in Peninsular Malaysia is dedicated to protecting ...
When properly managed, savannas like the Serengeti are capable of capturing at least as much carbon as tropical rainforests.
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.
Companies have an important role to play in land sector mitigation—that is, the reduction of greenhouse gases emitted from ...
When marketing “sustainable” products, accounting techniques sometimes override environmental impacts. For example, “mass ...
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