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Environmental stories and features from WWF

Long flight to photo award for Albatross

Like many fishers, Cameron Long is a man of few words. But luckily, his photos speak for him. His stunning winning shot of a solitary Salvin's albatross, navigating its flight a few well-judged inches from the ocean's surface, tip of one wing breaking the water, expresses the perfection of the albatross in a way words fail to.

Posted on 05 August 2008 | 0 comments | Read more

River Indus near Skardu in Pakistan.

Once upon a time in Hunza Valley

By Ali Gohar Hunzai.

I am a resident of Hunza Valley, situated in the north of Pakistan. A few days ago, I was thinking about the changes that had occurred in my valley since I was a child. I was quite shocked to know that while we enjoy modern facilities today, we have lost many things which were part of the natural environment of these areas and are now irreversibly lost. I would like to share the changes I have observed in three decades in Hunza Valley and the Karakoram areas where I was raised.

Posted on 14 May 2008 | 11 comments | Read more

Members of the world's densest rhino population - more than 80 in just 18 sq km of rhino habitat at Pobito Wildlife Sanctuary - are helping to reestablish populations elsewhere.

A tale of two places – restoring rhinos to their ranges in Assam, India

The glory of Manas was damaged by a violent local agitation that began in 1989 to carve out a separate Bodo homeland within the Indian federation. An armed struggle caused massive upheaval and destruction of the Park’s infrastructure, including destruction of anti-poaching camps, roads and bridges and killing of forest staff.

As of April 2008, the rhinos are back and there is a strong economic incentive for local communities, including the local ethnic community of the Bodos, to make sure the rhinos thrive.  “When tourists come, they want to see animals – it will be helpful to have the rhinos,” adds Dhan Chandra Doley, a local forest guard.

Posted on 17 April 2008 | 6 comments | Read more

Rhinos becoming wary of tranquilliser team on elephants

Hot, dirty and rewarding – moving rhinos in Assam

"The tranquilizing team changed tactics. They now started stalking the rhino on foot, using the elephants as cover. In the next half hour that ensued, the first rhino, a male, was tranquilized. After fifteen minutes of tracking, the rhino grew sluggish and his hind legs started sinking. A vet then approached this animal and gave him a second shot of tranquilizer. But as soon as the dart hit him, the animal was up on his feet and running again!"

Posted on 17 April 2008 | 3 comments | Read more

WWF Staff, Sanivalati Navuku and Penina Solomona, are surveying one of the turtle nesting beach at Ligan village, Kia. They found turtle bones at the site.

Chance sighting gets Fiji its first satellite tagged turtle

By Jone Niukula and Sanivalati Navuku*

Fiji researchers have been attempting for more than two years to satellite tag a turtle, a key factor in finding out migration patterns around the vast waters and multiple island groups of the Pacific.

Posted on 20 March 2008 | Read more

Specialists hope that Sangara will survive in taiga.

Will a young tigress make it into the wild?

Russian environmentalists are trying hard to rehabilitate a rescued tiger cub so as to bring her back to her natural habitat the Ussuryskaya taiga.

Posted on 13 March 2008 | Read more

The vice governor of Riau province is feeding Tesso's mother. He promised to protect the forest in his province that serves as elephant habitat.

Elephant flying squad celebrates new members

 By Syamsidar Syamsidar

Tesso Nilo National Park, Sumatra – Communities on the fringes of Sumatra’s Tesso Nilo National park mixed tradition and conservation on March 1, with a party to name and welcome the newest members of the WWF’s Elephant Flying Squad.
In Riau Province, the flying squad are four adult elephants and eight mahouts patrolling an area along the National Park boundaries, keeping wild elephants away from local communities and teaching villagers non-lethal ways to protect their crops.

Posted on 06 March 2008 | 0 comments | Read more

Business setting an example : Sony chair and CEO Sir Howard Stringer presents The Tokyo Declaration to WWF International Director-General James Leape.

WWF Climate Savers Tokyo Summit, February 2008 - “Not a business-as-usual conference”

By Tony Hare

It was Sony CEO, Sir Howard Stringer, who best set the tone at the WWF Climate Savers Tokyo Summit in February, saying it was not “a business-as-usual conference”.
It wasn’t business as usual – it was business as innovator; business as visionary; business as Climate Saver.

Posted on 16 February 2008 | Read more

A woman working for the Srepok project is teaching rangers and policemen on how to read a map.

Cambodian conservation work – not just a man’s world

By Porny You

Women are working as hard and sweating as much as the men in WWF conservation programs in remote areas of Cambodia.

In WWF-Cambodia’s Srepok Wilderness Area Project (SWAP), in the country’s eastern plains, Khmer, foreign and local indigenous Phnong women play a vital role in preserving the Mondulkiri Protected Forest (MPF).

Posted on 30 January 2008 | 3 comments | Read more

The picturesque town of Aberystwyth in Wales and other UK towns could be flooded by rising sea levels due to global warming and climate change.

One Planet Wales

As political and business leaders grapple to find ways of developing policies and products that help consumers lead more sustainable lifestyles, a new WWF campaign in Wales could help transform the local economy through greatly increasing the efficiency of energy and resource use.

Posted on 11 October 2007 | 0 comments | Read more

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