The World Wildlife Foundation (WWF) has released its Living Planet Report, which it publishes every two years. It says that the rate of species decline in the animal world, deforestation in the ...
A collection of classroom resources for primary and secondary schools to support teaching around World Wildlife Day. When is World Wildlife Day? World Wildlife Day is marked annually on 3 March.
Illegal and unsustainable wildlife trade are major threats to many of the world's species. Through its global network and especially the work of TRAFFIC, WWF helps to combat the illegal trade and ...
Worldwide wildlife populations have shrunk by nearly three-quarters on average over the past 50 years, the World Wildlife Fund ... according to the foundation. The report, the 15th issues by ...
according to the World Wildlife Foundation. Illicit wildlife trafficking is estimated to gross between $7.8 billion and $10 billion per year, and illegal timber trade is estimated as much as $7 ...
Get beyond the camera and discover the stories behind some of the best nature photography in the world. Read exclusive interviews with the Wildlife Photographer of the Year winners, learn tips and ...
The programme will equip you for a career as a wildlife professional with the skills and knowledge to deal with a variety of practical situations that professional wildlife biologists face on a day-to ...
Animals and plants aren’t just valuable for their own sake – they’re also part of a wider natural environment that may provide food, shelter, water, and other functions, for other wildlife and people ...
But it’s not just an issue that affects wildlife. The illegal wildlife trade is a huge international organised crime – the fourth biggest illegal trade in the world, worth over an estimated £15 ...
The report, produced by the World Wildlife Foundation (WWF) in collaboration with the Zoological Society of London (ZSL), warns that the planet is nearing potentially catastrophic tipping points ...
“Our study shows that we can train African giant pouched rats to detect illegally trafficked wildlife, even when it has been concealed among other substances,” Dr. Isabelle Szott, a researcher at the ...