Adopt an Animal

Adopt an Animal

Make a symbolic animal adoption to help save some of the world's most endangered animals from extinction and supports WWFs conservation efforts. Adopt Now!

E-cards

Send a FREE E-card

Show your support of WWF's conservation work with a FREE E-card!
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Travel

Travel

Travel With WWF

Visit our travel section and choose from many amazing trips! Learn more

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Sign up for a WWF Visa, and Chase will contribute $50 for each new WWF account opened and activated online.
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Species

Protecting the future of nature

From our start in 1961, WWF has worked to protect endangered species. We're ensuring that the world our children inherit will be home to elephants, tigers, giant pandas, whales and other wildlife species, as well as people.

WWF safeguards hundreds of species around the world, but we focus special attention on our flagship species: giant pandas, tigers, endangered whales and dolphins, rhinos, elephants, marine turtles and great apes. These species not only need special measures and extra protection in order to survive, they also serve as umbrella species: helping them helps numerous other species that live in the same habitats.

In addition to our flagship animals, we work to protect numerous species in peril around the world that live within our priority ecoregions. Large predators like snow leopards and grizzly bears, migratory species like whooping cranes and songbirds, and a host of other species facing threats also benefit from WWF's conservation efforts. Our wildlife trade experts at TRAFFIC work to ensure that trade in wildlife products doesn't harm a species, while also fighting against illegal and unsustainable trade.

WWF is known for acting on sound science. Science leads and guides our strategies and approaches, from the best way to restore tigers in viable, breeding populations to deciding which areas need protection the most.

Species Finder

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Where In The World?

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Wild Finder

A searchable map database of more than 26,000 species worldwide

Wild Finder

Search by Place

Search by Species

WWF Experts

Dr. Sybille Klenzendorf

Director
Species Conservation Program

"Young people are the future of conservation. We must inspire them and we must lead them by our example."

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Tiger Video

Take Action

Take action through WWF's Conservation Action Network, where you can speak out for wildlife and wild places around the globe.

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Free T-Shirt With Donation


Make a gift to help protect the future of nature today and we'll send you a free "Hotter than I should be" t-shirt that you can proudly wear to demonstrate your support of WWF.

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