From WWF E-news Team <[email protected]>
Subject See where Amazon turtles and dolphins swim
Date February 17, 2023 3:06 PM
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John, explore good news for Alaska and innovative solutions for protecting swim routes and fisheries. Thanks, as always, for helping wildlife and nature thrive.

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WWF E-NEWS
February 2023


Protecting the Amazon's swimways

Explore how migratory fish, turtles, and river dolphins swim through the Amazon region and learn why protecting its critical rivers is so important.

See our infographic >
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ACTIVISM
Win for Bristol Bay
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Taking a bite out of fisheries crime
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What is green hydrogen and how can it help tackle the climate crisis?
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NATURE: BREAKING PODCAST
Alaska Updates: Snow Crabs, Pebble Mine, and More
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TRAVEL
Video: Finding Home in Alaska
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Can you tell?

What are these boxes and how are they helping people coexist with tigers?
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Wildlife spotlight
Brown bear
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Size
Brown bears are one of the biggest carnivores. Adult males are larger than females. They can weigh over 1,000 pounds and be 9 feet long from nose to tail.

Habitat and range
They can be found in widely varied habitats, from high mountain forests to tundra to coastlines to desert edges. Much less widespread today, they now live in Western Canada, Alaska, and northwestern US states as well as in parts of Russia, Europe, and Asia.

Most brown bears are dark brown, but some have cream-colored, almost black, or white-tipped brown fur. On top of their shoulders sits a large hump of muscle. Amazingly, females usually give birth while hibernating during the winter months.

* Send a spring ecard (early!)
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* Support WWF's global conservation efforts by symbolically adopting a grizzly bear
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Pop quiz

Octopuses are well known for having eight arms. How many hearts do they have?

Four
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Three
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Two
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One
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WWF en Espanol

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 Twitter, Instagram, y YouTube para más información.

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*  Los depredadores de los depredadores
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*  Protegiendo las rutas acuáticas del Amazonas
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*  Eliminar los delitos pesqueros requiere de alianzas innovadoras. WWF acaba de ayudar a lanzar una.
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*  EPA bloquea catastrófico proyecto minero en la bahía de Bristol, Alaska
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2023 World Wildlife Fund
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