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wildlife

Uniting for Conservation in Laikipia, Kenya

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Uniting for Conservation in Laikipia, Kenya

WildLanscapes International united key players in Kenyan conservation for high-level meetings in Washington, D.C. this past June. This collaboration marks a milestone in our ongoing conservation efforts, as it is the first time our partners have come together as a coalition to lobby congress.

Our goal: advocate for increased U.S. financial support for African conservation, with a special focus on creating a contiguous habitat for Eastern black rhino in Laikipia. 

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How bears and salmon work together in Katmai National Park and Preserve

How bears and salmon work together in Katmai National Park and Preserve

If I asked you to picture a brown bear, there’s a good chance you’d image one of Alaska’s massive bears standing in a stream, fishing for salmon. Can you see it now? More likely than not, you’re picturing Brooks Falls in Katmai National Park and Preserve. Don’t know it by name? Well, I’m sure you’ll recognize it by sight.

Together, Katmai National Parks’s brown bears and sockeye salmon make a positive feedback loop that creates a system of resources benefitting the area’s wildlife, plant life, and ecosystem as a whole.

Protecting the Last of the Renosterveld

Protecting the Last of the Renosterveld

WildLandscapes International is assisting the ORCT with securing 1,825 acres of Critically Endangered Renosterveld, one of the most endangered vegetation types on the planet. This vital habitat will adjoin and extend the Nature Preservation, ensuring that it is protected going forward.

These are only two properties with this amount of renosterveld remaining and the only way of securing them is through purchase. Donors have raised half the funds needed for purchase, but without the remaining funds the conservation areas will remain unsecured.

Biodiversity Within the Scrubland of the Florida Wildlife Corridor

Biodiversity Within the Scrubland of the Florida Wildlife Corridor

Florida boasts not only beautiful beaches and brilliant sunsets but also boundless biodiversity. It is one of the most biodiverse states in the U.S., ranking among the top five in endemic species (plants and animals found nowhere else). Unfortunately, with so many unique species and continual expansion into their territory, Florida also ranks among the top five states at risk for species extinction.

This includes species like the gopher tortoise, some of which reside in the Florida Wildlife Corridor.

The Secret to Protecting Vast Landscapes: Conservation Areas

The Secret to Protecting Vast Landscapes: Conservation Areas

A Conservation Area is a given area of land in which private landowners can join a regional partnership consisting of interested agencies, organizations, indigenous tribes, and local communities, the goal of which is to achieve regional conservation goals. Private landowners benefit because they acquire less than fee title interest or enter into management agreements while retaining their rights to land use.

This article will explain some of the top reasons that conservation areas are the best path forward for landscape conservation.

A Venture Within the Florida Wildlife Corridor

A Venture Within the Florida Wildlife Corridor

WildLandscapes are in the process of expanding our work throughout the state of Florida, and it's with these projects in mind that our team toured Florida Wildlife Corridor earlier this month. At the same time, we held meetings with stakeholders to better understand how we can effectively accomplish even more in the state. As these projects unfold, we’re eager to share with you what we’ve been working on!

In the meantime, we want to share some scenes from our recent tour, from the Ocala National Forest Wildlife to marine mammals of Merritt Island Nature Preserve, in the hopes they will inspire you as they did for us.

Protecting 328,600 acres in the Green Heart of the Everglades

Protecting 328,600 acres in the Green Heart of the Everglades

WildLandscapes, in partnership with Family Lands Remembered, has entered into an agreement with Collier Companies to permanently protect 11,171 acres and to acquire 317,436 acres of mineral rights. All of these lands remain unspoiled, providing essential habitats to many of the Everglades' endangered species. Securing the Collier properties will position the National Park Service (NPS) and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) with the opportunity to ensure connectivity between large conservation areas and landscapes in Florida, and prevent future harmful development or exploitation.

Understanding How Sustainable Ranching Can Improve Habitat Health

Understanding How Sustainable Ranching Can Improve Habitat Health

WildLandscapes has partnered with Roaring Springs Ranch (the Ranch) and High Desert Partnership to implement several scientific studies that will inform sound sustainable ranching activities and determine the health of the ecosystems and its wildlife conservation efforts in the region. The sustainable management of the land will be key to preserving the Sheldon-Hart-Malheur landscape in the face of future climate change and growing threats of megafires.

Alerting Transport Authorities to the Imminent Threat of Wildlife Crime in Northeast India

Alerting Transport Authorities to the Imminent Threat of Wildlife Crime in Northeast India

Wildlife trade poses the second-biggest threat to the survival of species after habitat destruction. India is among the top 20 countries for the illegal wildlife trade and its fast-expanding airport, rail and other transport sector is often used by wildlife traffickers to smuggle high-end, high-value species and products. To check wildlife crime and improve biodiversity conservation and preservation efforts in India, the Indian Government mandated Wildlife Crime Control Bureau of India to initiate vigil on wildlife criminals to protect wildlife from illegal wildlife criminals.

Conservation Victories in New Hampshire!

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Conservation Victories in New Hampshire!

In partnership with Bear Hill Conservancy and Kilham Bear Center, WildLandscapes Conservation and Preservation recently permanently protected over 2,300 acres of land in New Hampshire, now added to Silvio O. Conte National Fish and Wildlife Refuge and we have plans to preserve over 12,557 more!

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