A Conservation Success in a Harsh Land
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| Harold E. Malde |
The Chihuahuan Desert Borderlands span millions of acres in northern Mexico and Texas, and now, an ambitious conservation plan for the region has at last been filled. Mexican president Felipe Calderón issued a decree creating the 826,000-acre Ocampo Flora and Fauna Protection Area, creating a nearly contiguous conservation area stretching across 2 million acres.
Protecting a Desolate Area’s Fragile Resources »
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Adapting to Climate Change: Fire Management
Although Integrated Fire Management is not a new term, IFM — as it is defined by the Conservancy (see definition below) — is a promising new, scaleable framework that works in places with fire-dependent ecosystems as well as places with fire-sensitive ecosystems. Its effectiveness is not dependent on a country’s development status. The Nature Conservancy is using this framework to address fire-related conservation threats at global, national and local scales.
Our Impact: Fire Management »
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Adapting to Climate Change: Kimbe Bay
Kimbe Bay is part of the global center of marine diversity called the Coral Triangle, which supports 76 percent of the world’s coral species.
Here, The Nature Conservancy helped design the first network of marine protected areas (MPAs) designed to incorporate the principle of reef resiliency.
Our Impact: Kimbe Bay »
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Protecting the Marbled Murrelet
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| Photo © Phil Green/TNC |
Marbled murrelets can fly faster than 40 miles an hour but it's lack of maneuverability in flight makes it a challenge for the murrelet to land on a branch. So it's really important for the forest to have openings and corridors under the canopy to create favorable nesting conditions. We're using selective and sustainable loggint in an old-growth forest to actually help revive this threatened seabird.
Can Sustainable Logging Save A Sea Bird? »
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Government Funding Priority Given to San Pedro River
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| Harold E. Malde |
President Barack Obama's released 2010 budget request includes funding to help conserve an iconic piece of Arizona – the San Pedro River and the riparian forest along its banks. The San Pedro River provides critical habitat that supports nearly half of all bird species found in the United States and Arizona's valuable water supply.
An Opportunity for a Sustainable Future in Arizona »
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Educating with the Carbon Footprint Calculator
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| 2002 Corbis |
Inevitably, in going about our daily lives — commuting, sheltering our families, eating — each of us contributes to the greenhouse gas emissions that are causing climate change. Yet, there are many things each of us, as individuals, can do to reduce our carbon emissions. The choices we make in our homes, our travel, the food we eat, and what we buy and throw away all influence our carbon footprint and can help ensure a stable climate for future generations.
Use The Nature Conservancy's carbon footprint calculator to measure your impact on our climate. Our carbon footprint calculator estimates how many tons of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases your choices create each year.
What's Your Carbon Footprint? »
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Welcoming Birds Back to Alaska
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| Michael McBride |
Something's awry on the unfortunately but aptly named Rat Island, a 10-square-mile dot in the Aleutians. Invasive rats have pillaged seabird nests here since they first spilled from a 1780's shipwreck that — except for the stowaway rats — left no survivors.
So in September 2008, The Nature Conservancy and its partners set out across the Bering Sea to eradicate the rats once and for all — and embark on the most ambitious island habitat restoration project ever undertaken in the Northern Hemisphere, involving helicopters and a boat ride into the teeth of North Pacific's worst weather.
Find out How We Did It »
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Key Property Purchased on Oregon’s Iconic Table Rocks
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| Alan D. St. John |
The Nature Conservancy is purchasing 1,710 acres on the Table Rocks near Medford, Oregon. This will guarantee that the Table Rocks will be permanently protected for rare plants and wildlife and sustain a recreation area for the many visitors who hike annually in the spring to take in nature in its abundance.
Learn More About This Vital Acquisition »
Saving the Titi Monkey
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| 2008 Bridget Besaw |
The last remaining 6,000 tití monkeys live in isolated patches of Colombia's dry forest at risk of total deforestation. The monkeys are also victims of poaching. The Nature Conservancy and partners are working with local ranchers to protect the remaining forest for sustainable livelihoods...and the monkeys.
What We're Doing for the Cotton-Top Tamarin »
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Restoring a Forest for T.P.
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| Limeydog via a Creative Commons license. |
Thanks to donors contributing a dollar per tree to The Nature Conservancy’s Plant a Billion Trees campaign to rebuild the Atlantic Forest, Pedro and his co-planters each put about 300 seedlings back in the ground every day during the planting season...so that we can make more sustainable toilet paper.
How We're Making Toilet Paper More Sustainable »
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