This year 11343.9984617 extinctions |
This year 8632579847.41tonnes of co2 emitted |
This year 12146331.491acres of forest lost |
And that’s helping to save endangered animals from extinction. Can you imagine there not being any more rhinos or orangutans left in the wild? No, nor can we and that’s why we need to take action NOW to protect them.
Without these projects we could lose some of the world’s most incredible animals and plants forever, but together we CAN help save them.
Donate online securely and 100% of your donations will go directly to the project you choose.
Learn more about our projects and join us to Act for Wildlife by sponsoring one (or more) of them. And don’t forget to read the blogs too – there you’ll find lots more up to date news from the wild from the people that are actually working on the projects.
Thanks to our partners Chengdu Giant Panda Base in China for the use of the amazing photograph of a Giant Panda
Protecting Giant Pandas and Red Pandas from extinction in the wild, means ensuring they have a home to live in. Without the forests these enigmatic animals and many endemic birds will be lost from the wild forever.
With the western black rhino thought to have become extinct in the wild in the last few years, conservation of the eastern black rhino is now paramount if we are to save these animals from becoming extinct too.
Nigeria's rich, luscious highlands are home to more than a quarter of the last remaining Nigerian chimpanzees. Their survival is crucial, but unless the forests where they live are protected from destruction they will become extinct.
In Assam, the Asian elephant faces some of the most extreme human-elephant conflict in the world. Over the last 60 years the number of Asian elephants has halved and their population continues to decline.
With so many of its animal and plant species only being found on the islands, Mauritius (and its neighbouring island, Rodrigues) is a biodiversity ‘hotspot’. That means they urgently require continued and increased protection.
There is more than a third of the 6600 known amphibian species threatened with extinction. This is thought to be one of the greatest conservation challenges we have ever faced.
It’s not just exotic animals in countries like Africa and Indonesia that are threatened with extinction. It’s reported that England alone has lost around 500 species since 1800.
In the last century 50% of the forests in which Bornean orangutans once lived in have been lost, pushing the species towards extinction and leaving them quite literally hanging on for their lives.
globally recognised as an important biodiversity hotspot, the philippines Comprises of over 7000 islands. with a diverse biogeography, these islands are home to hundreds of species that are found nowhere else.