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Plus, find out how crocodile conservation helps people, and read poems about nature by our creative WWF supporters.
When we protect wildlife and nature, we also help communities and livelihoods thrive. Explore how we're doing just that in Belize and read love poems for nature submitted by supporters like you. Thank you for the love you give to our planet today and every day.
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STORIES
WWF E-NEWS
February 2025
Healing community relationships with crocodiles
Meet Savannah—one of five "Crocodile Ambassadors" who are part of a program focused on building better community relationships with crocodiles and their mangrove habitats.
Meet Savannah ►
Follow the WWF Action Team on Instagram
Learn more about protecting wildlife and nature by following the WWF Action Team (@wwf_act) on Instagram. You'll discover fun conservation facts and how to use your voice to help our planet.
Follow us ►
Meet HoneyRose Smith: WWF’s first Environmental Journalism Scholarship winner
Where do bees go in the winter?
Read supporter-submitted poetry about love of wildlife and nature
PODCAST
LA Wildfires: A disaster management expert on rebuilding after a tragedy
TRAVEL
VIDEO: The Bear Coast—an Alaska conservation story
Do you know?
When animals can move freely from place to place, they’re able to find food, breed, and establish new home territories. This map shows corridors (in magenta) used by populations of an African species as they move between areas. Do you know which species uses these corridors? (Hint: It’s the biggest animal on land.)
Take a guess ►
Wildlife spotlight
Humpback whale
Size
Humpback whales are up to 60 feet long and can weigh up to 40 tons. In one day, a single whale might eat 3,000 pounds of small fish, plankton, and krill (shrimp-like crustaceans).
Interesting info
These whales are famous for their songs, but only males sing—for up to 24 hours at a time! They pick up themes from each other, spreading their culture across thousands of miles.
Humpback whales live in all the world’s oceans. Some migrate 5,000 miles between tropical breeding grounds and colder feeding grounds. Individuals can be identified by their flukes (tails). They’re threatened by entanglement in fishing gear, vessel collisions, noise from human activity, coastal habitat destruction, and climate change.
Send a whale ecard
Support WWF's global conservation efforts by symbolically adopting a humpback whale
Pop quiz
Wetlands take many forms. Which of these is not a type of wetland?
Mangrove
Savanna
Billabong
Swamp
WWF en Español
En WWF ofrecemos una gran cantidad de contenido en español como parte de nuestros esfuerzos por llegar a la comunidad Latina e Hispana de Estados Unidos. Visita nuestro sitio web o síguenos en Facebook, Instagram, X y YouTube para más información.
Los bisontes, los grandes héroes de las Grandes Planicies
Castores constructores: cómo un gran roedor diseña paisajes resilientes al cambio climático
Sanando las relaciones comunitarias con los cocodrilos
8 datos que debes saber sobre la escasez de agua
Photos: Morelet’s crocodile © WWF-US/Jaime Rojo; Climate March © WWF-US/Keith Arnold; HoneyRose Smith © Amittia Smith; Bumblebee © Clay Bolt; Rainbow © Day's Edge Productions; Nature Breaking image © Shutterstock.com/jctabb and © Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images; Bear Coast video © Andrew Ackerman; Southern African map © WWF; Humpback whale © Shutterstock.com/Tomas Kotouc/WWF; Whale ecard © Sylvia Earle/WWF; Wetland © Peter Chadwick/WWF; Bison © Thomas Szajner/WWF-US; Beaver © Heather Diamond; Marissa Tellez and crocodile © WWF-US/Jaime Rojo; Rio Grande © Audra Melton/WWF-US
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