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How wildlife conservation in northern Kenya survived the pandemic When safari tourism dried up with the coronavirus, northern Kenya’s community conservancies got by—but not everyone’s happy ...
Wildlife excursions in Africa are going deeper, highlighting less-visited regions and ecosystems while also leading the charge for conservation in innovative ways. Here are three unconventional ...
The dogged search for a bird that many people figured had gone extinct included torrential rains, washed-out bridges, swine ...
Conservationists went to dramatic lengths to save the birds, including pumping boiling hot water into the ground to ward off fire ants.
Here's how you can witness rhino conservation in action In South Africa, a philanthropic safari initiative allows small groups of high-paying guests the chance to witness rhino conservation in action.
Champions of wildlife and wild places win prestigious awards The National Geographic Society honors Explorers working to protect elephants, bats, a rare antelope—and millions of miles of ocean.
He was helping lead the jaguar program at the Wildlife Conservation Society, which he left in 2006 to co-found and run Panthera, an advocacy organization named after the genus to which the world ...
From the carving of an ice shelf to the buzz of a forest floor, nature is noisy. These sounds can be recorded and analyzed to help tell the story of an ecosystem. Discrete and relatively ...
How to photograph wildlife ethically Putting the well-being of animals first should be every photographer’s goal. National Geographic photographers share tips on how they do it.
In a 2013 op-ed in the New York Times countering the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s proposal to list lions as a threatened species, making it more difficult for Americans to hunt them, the ...
According to a 1992 Roper poll study, zoos and aquariums were the third most trusted messenger of wildlife conservation and environmental issues, trailing only National Geographic and Jacques ...
In the case of wildlife detection dogs, they can also become partners for kit foxes, blue butterflies, grizzly bears, and an array of other creatures, helping in the struggle to secure their future.