Leadership Team | WWF - World Wildlife Fund As a nonprofit organization, WWF values the trust placed in us by partners, governments, private entities, and donors to deliver science-based, innovative conservation solutions that benefit both nature and people The commitment to safeguard that trust begins with our leaders and exists at all
Where do snow leopards live? And nine other snow leopard facts Snow leopards scale the great, steep slopes of mountains in Central Asia with ease, blending into the landscape But these endangered cats face many threats including habitat loss, reduced prey and retaliatory killings WWF works to reduce human-leopard conflict and protect the fragile snow leopard habitat
Saving Tigers from Extinction - Point Defiance Zoo Aquarium With fewer than 4,000 tigers left on our planet – and fewer than 400 Sumatran tigers in the wild – we are taking a good look at how we’re helping save tigers from extinction – and how you can help Science, cubs and caring Indah, Kirana and Dari were born at Point Defiance Zoo in 2014
Hectors Dolphin | Species | WWF - World Wildlife Fund Hector’s dolphins are the smallest and rarest marine dolphins in the world They have distinct black facial markings, short stocky bodies and a dorsal fin shaped like a Mickey Mouse ear There is a subspecies of Hector’s dolphin known as Maui’s dolphin that is critically endangered and
Human - Elephant Conflict | WWF WWF and its partners are working to reduce conflict with elephants through a range of techniques These include: chilli and tobacco-based deterrents to keep elephants out of fields; changing farming practices - making farms easier to defend; growing crops that elephants don't like; education; and improving oil palm plantation practices in
Arabian leopard - Wikipedia Since the early 1990s, leopards are considered rare and close to extinction due to direct persecution by local people and depletion of wild prey [19] There was a small population in Israel's Negev desert, estimated at 20 individuals in the late 1970s [20] Leopards were hunted until the early 1960s