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News from the Forests of New Guinea

The need for firewood is a major cause for deforestation in Nepal. Finding firewood is an ever more strenuous task, usually carried out by women.

Forests fundamental to effective climate deal

The world’s ability to control climate change could be crippled if global leaders do not support clear and effective targets to arrest deforestation at climate talks in Copenhagen in December, WWF said at the conclusion of a key global foresty summit. 

Posted on 25 October 2009 | 1 comments | Read more

Local tribesman in the TransFly. The head piece is made from the feathers of the cassowary bird. Rhoku, Papua New Guinea.

Local communities celebrate new protected areas in Papua New Guinea

The creation of three new wildlife management areas in Papua New Guinea will protect some of Asia-Pacific’s most threatened and unique wildlife habitats.

Posted on 28 September 2007 | 0 comments | Read more

Village girls in traditional dress at the Sepik Crocodile Festival. Ambunti, Papua New Guinea.

Celebrating crocodiles in Papua New Guinea

A festival in eastern Papua New Guinea pays tribute to crocodiles of the Sepik River, one of the largest unpolluted rivers in the Asia-Pacific region.

Posted on 05 March 2007 | 0 comments | Read more

Local woman in traditional dress in Rhoku village, by a tributary of the Bensbach River. Her headdress is made from the feathers of the Cassowary - Papua New Guinea's largest bird, and she is adorned with white palm cockatoo feathers. Western Province, Papua New Guinea.
December 2004

Crafting a Vision for the Future: Protecting New Guinea’s TransFly...

“When I was a little boy, you could walk into the bush about 2km and come back 30 minutes later with something you’d hunted,” Yul explains nostalgically. “But now you have to walk for hours and hours, sometimes even days”. What threats does the TransFly face, and how is WWF working to address these problems?

Posted on 25 October 2006 | 0 comments | Read more

Blyth's hornbill is one of many bird species found within the TransFly.

Protecting Sacred Lands in the Last Paradise on Earth…

“You dig a big yam up with a stick made out of yuka, it has to be a big one,” explains Abia Bai, a community elder from the Maiyawa tribe, who is sharing with me the secret to a good yam harvest. Find out more about the people of the TransFly, a vast savanna region in Papua that WWF is trying to protect.

Posted on 25 October 2006 | 0 comments | Read more

Some 80,000ha of rainforest around Papua New Guinea's Mt Bosavi (2400m) in the Kikoria River Basin have been designated protected areas. Mt Bosavi (seen in the background).

New protected areas for Papua New Guinea

Local communities in Papua New Guinea gathered along the volcanic slopes of Mount Bosavi in the country’s Southern Highlands to celebrate the creation of three new protected areas.

Posted on 25 October 2006 | 0 comments | Read more

One of eight new orchid species (<i>Cadetia Kutubu</I>) recently discovered in Papua New Guinea.

WWF discovers new species of orchids in Papua New Guinea

A series of expeditions by WWF scientists into previously unexplored areas of tropical rainforest in Papua New Guinea have revealed at least eight new orchid species previously unknown to science.

Posted on 16 October 2006 | 0 comments | Read more

Villagers in Papua New Guinea handling log

Oxley’s skewed agenda won’t help PNG

Renewed allegations from a logging industry spin-doctor that WWF is pursuing a campaign to replace commercial forestry with eco-forestry in PNG are completely baseless and unfounded.

Posted on 28 September 2006 | 0 comments | Read more

Blyth's hornbill is one of many bird species found within the TransFly.

A conservation vision for New Guinea's wetlands

Governments, community leaders, scientists and conservation organizations, including WWF, have launched a conservation "vision" to conserve one of the Asia-Pacific region's largest, richest and most pristine wetlands on the island of New Guinea.

Posted on 17 May 2006 | 0 comments | Read more

Eclectus parrot. New Guinea, Indonesia.

::: Asia-Pacific Story :::
Essential oils from New Guinea’s forests

New Guinea contains more strange and new and beautiful natural objects than any other part of the globe. Indeed, few places on earth rival the diversity of New Guinea, one of the great natural jewels of our planet. Find out more about a WWF trip to Indonesia's Wasur National Park.

Posted on 20 January 2006 | 0 comments | Read more

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