John, discover how we're collaborating to reduce food waste, protect sharks, and preserve treasured resources in Bristol Bay, Alaska. And be inspired by nature as you read poetry for the planet. Thank you for caring about the diversity of life on our planet as much as we do.
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WWF E-news
November 2022
A fresh new partnership
When it comes to decreasing food waste, creative solutions are always welcome-and this partnership between WWF and the US Postal Service is no exception. See how farmers are able to make special fresh deliveries.
How we are collaborating >
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Wildlife needs you
On average, there has been a 69% decline in wildlife populations in just the past five decades. You can help protect biodiversity. Tell your members of Congress to pass bills that increase funding for global nature conservation programs.
Take action >
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Poetry for the planet
Words are powerful. To spread awareness of our broken relationship with nature, these distinguished poets reflect on our magnificent but endangered planet.
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The end of Pebble Mine
The proposed mining project would greatly harm the species and communities of Bristol Bay, Alaska. A historic decision could stop it for good.
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Arctic fox win
For the first time in over 25 years, the Arctic fox has successfully bred in Finland. See why we're hopeful.
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TRAVEL
Explore how WWF is curbing climate change
Our special small-group adventures in 2023 will include visits to Greenland, the Amazon, and the Arctic to explore what WWF is doing to fight climate change.
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Can you tell?
Why are these researchers attaching a satellite transmitter to a tiger shark?
Take a guess >
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Wildlife spotlight
Loggerhead turtle
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Range: Subtropical and temperate regions of the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans, and in the Mediterranean Sea
Diet: Loggerhead turtles are named for their large heads, which support powerful jaw muscles, allowing them to crush hard-shelled prey such as clams, horseshoe crabs, and sea urchins. They also eat small fragments of plastic, which they mistake for food.
Like many other sea turtles, female loggerhead turtles migrate great distances to lay their eggs in the sand of beaches close to where they hatched decades earlier. Loggerheads' shells serve as important habitat to other organisms. As many as 100 species of animals and plants have been recorded living on one single loggerhead turtle!
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Pop quiz
We depend on grasslands for pollinators, clean water, healthy air, and more. Approximately how many acres of grasslands were destroyed across the US and Canadian Great Plains in 2020?
250,000
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800,000
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1.8 million
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2.6 million
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WWF en Espanol
En WWF ofrecemos una gran cantidad de contenido en espanol como parte de nuestros esfuerzos por llegar a la comunidad Latina e Hispana de Estados Unidos. Visita nuestro sitio web o siguenos en Twitter, Instagram y YouTube para mas informacion.
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* Que esperar de las conversaciones internacionales sobre el clima de este ano
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* Zorros polares en peligro critico de extincion se reproducen exitosamente en Finlandia
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* Amazonia en crisis: la perdida de bosques amenaza a la region y al planeta
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* Por que los ganaderos estan adoptando practicas para proteger los pastizales con WWF
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¿Hablas español? Visita Descubre WWF
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2022 World Wildlife Fund
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