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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 ...
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.
In this guidance document, the Bioplastic Feedstock Alliance aims to align decision-makers on an approach for setting ...
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.
As climate change continues to drive environmental shifts, another growing threat is emerging: human-wildlife conflict. Both people and wildlife are being pushed into closer proximity in search of ...
Through Forests Forward, WWF’s flagship program for corporate leadership on forests, WWF projects financed by private sector ...
The inaugural Forests Forward Impact Report, released today, lands at a critical moment for our planet. In 2024, tropical ...
The most comprehensive mapping to date of the world's wetlands A new study helps us better understand the vital habitats, where 40% of the world's species live or breed ...
The Amazon river dolphin, also known as pink river dolphins, is becoming vulnerable in certain areas due to dams and contamination of rivers and lakes. Help WWF save them.