Learn why the Amazon is critical for our planet and how WWF is working to protect its forests, rivers, and wildlife from growing threats.
Camera traps reveal that Amazonian animals use a walkway high up in the forest as a secret night-time highway.
As a city kid, many people find it hard to believe that I love nature. I guess it’s a part of my Tanzanian heritage, but I always enjoy my time when I’m outside in nature. So when I had the ...
The government of Brazil, Brazilian communities, and a broad coalition of partners—including WWF—launched the ARPA ...
Indigenous communities, the government and civil society organizations are working to identify the status and whereabouts of animals in one of the most deforested states of the Brazilian Amazon.
Two jaguars, caught with a camera trap survey, walk through the Brazilian Amazon rainforest. (Daniel Rocha/UC Davis) From jaguars and ocelots to anteaters and capybara, most land-based mammals living ...
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Analysis-What the COP30 climate summit in the Amazon delivered for forests and Indigenous people
Brazil insisted on hosting this year's COP30 climate summit in the Amazonian city of Belem to put rainforests at the heart of ...
Brazilian farmers want to end a ban on planting soya on cleared land, which critics say would spur deforestation.
Low-impact logging practices in commercial tropical forests can contribute to wildlife protection and complement protected areas to provide habitat for many species in the Amazon. Low-impact logging ...
ZME Science on MSN
Sloth selfies are feeding a booming wildlife trafficking trade
It’s not easy to find a sloth in the middle of the forest. They spend most of their time in the tree canopy and are masters ...
Atmos reports on Veja's initiative to source rubber from Amazonian seringueiros, aiming to combat deforestation while ...
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