Ecology Page

Bob Media is not related to WWF. However, we strongly support what they are trying to do and how they are going about it. “Since those early days WWF has grown up to be one of the largest environmental organizations in the world. Currently there are more than 1300 WWF conservation projects underway around the world. The vast majority of these focus on local issues. They range from school nature gardens in Zambia, to initiatives that appear on the packaging in your local supermarket. From the restoration of orangutan habitats to the establishment of giant panda reserves.

Almost all our work involves partnerships.
We team up with local non-profit agencies and other global NGOs. We form relationships with village elders, local councils and regional government offices. And in this day and age of globalization, critically, we work with businesses who are willing to change.”

WWF - Panda.org

WWF-Global

WWF - USA

WWF-USA

WWF - Canada

WWF-Canada
Priority Species
Polar Bears
African Elephants
Amur Leopard
Giant Panda
Red Kangaroo
Black Rhinos
What is Biodiversity?
Tigers
Last days of the King?
Threats to Tigers
What you can do for Tigers
Solutions for Tigers
The future for Tigers
Tiger Pictures
Tiger Videos

World Land Trust — Rainforest Conservation in Action
The World Land Trust is an inter-national conservation
charity, based in Halesworth, a rural town in Suffolk, UK. Since its foundation in 1989 as the World Wide Land Conservation Trust, the World Land Trust has been working to preserve the world’s most biologically important and threatened lands, and has helped purchase and protect over 375,000 acres of habitats rich in wildlife, in Asia, Central and South America and the UK. Who runs the World Land Trust? The World Land Trust is run by a small number of staff and interns, many of whom work part-time.

Tropical Rainforest Coalition
Tropical Rainforest Coalition (TRC) believes
that individuals can make a difference. Looking back, we can say we have. Established in 1991 during World Rainforest Week, TRC is an all-volunteer, 501c3 non-profit organization that has made a significant impact on the preservation of rainforests and indigenous people. TRC builds coalitions between individuals, corporations, businesses, learning institutions and non-governmental organizations seeking to reverse the unsustainable use of the rainforests.

Hovertechnics
SuddenRush Atlantic Rainforest Institution - The
main goal of the SuddenRush Atlantic Rainforest Institution (SRARFI) is to preserve the truly endangered and species-rich Atlantic Rainforest along Brazils Atlantic coastline. All intact rainforest that you sponsor is then transferred into a natural reserve that guarantees governmental protection for eternity! Our other main target is to transfer deforested land that still boarders intact rainforest into secondary rainforest by a new and sustainable way of planting Guarana. You can help the Atlantic Rainforest to preserve and restore the natural heritage by becoming a sponsor.

STARO - Preservation and conservation of the Amazon rainforest
STARO
- objects are to promote the preservation and conservation of the Amazon rainforest, to advance education in the subject and to promote research into the flora and fauna of the Amazon Rainforest and to publish the useful results. Our mission is to promote and support the protection and the conservation of the Amazon Rainforest. Although the Amazon rainforest has hardly been explored, 16,700km2 was lost due to deforestation in 2005 / 06. If man continues this rate of destruction by the year 2020 the largest rainforest in the world will be gone. The rainforest is the source of much of the world’s prescribed medicines.

Brazil Eco Adventure Tours
Brazil Eco Adventure Tours – Brazil is the first among the megadiverse countries and the Atlantic Rainforest / (Mata Atlântica) the most impressive of its 6 biomes. It contains the worlds second largest biosphere reserve, 4 of the 7 Brazilian natural world heritage sites and circa 600 of the 900 conservation units. The flora and fauna of this unique hotspot is distributed over 7 ecosystems with up to 5 latitudinal zones. Nowhere else such an expressive geological, biological and social/cultural diversity in combination with a fantastic landscape can be found.

GreenPeace
Greenpeace is a force for hope. We are independent and non-partisan. We do not solicit donations from corporations or governments and rely on individuals such as you to make our work possible. One of Greenpeace’s
unique strengths is our capacity to conduct international campaigns in countries around the world, giving us the ability to challenge environmental threats and
promote change on issues that transcend national borders and require
international cooperation.The latest edition of the Greenpeace Guide to Greener Electronics exposes the widening gap between companies that make good on their promises to clean up, and those that don’t. Visit their Guide to Greener Electronics.

The Amazon Conservation Association
The Amazon Conservation Association (ACA) is a 501(c)3
nonprofit organization that is active in Peru and Bolivia. Our directors and staff are experienced ecologists and conservationists. We work to protect biodiversity by studying ecosystems and developing innovative conservation tools to protect land in the region while supporting the livelihoods of local communities. Our mission is to conserve the biological diversity of the Amazon. Road construction, logging, and land clearing for agriculture are endangering the health of the Amazon rainforest.

Iracambi Atlantic Rainforest Research and Conservation Center
Iracambi Atlantic Rainforest Research and Conservation
Center
– From all over the world, come Volunteers and Researchers to help Iracambi fulfil their mission to work with their community to make conservation of the rainforest more attractive than its destruction. They live in the Atlantic Rainforest on a working farm in the buffer zone of the Serra do Brigadeiro State Park, home to the world’s largest population of one of the most endangered primates in the Americas, the Wooly Spider Monkey. Daily they face the same issues as their farming neighbors: how can they make a living from the land, whilst also preserving the biodiversity of the area?