Stories

  • For an Indigenous community in the Amazon, stingless bees mean sustainable livelihoods

    October 09, 2025

    Traditional community members living near the Tapajós River, like José Ivanildo Correia dos Santos, generate income from beekeeping. The program provides economic opportunity and a way to pass it on to future generations. It also helps community members continue to protect the rainforest in the face of numerous encroaching threats.

    José Ivanildo Correa dos Santos harvests honey from stingless bees
  • Nature, resilience, finance: Three words that defined Climate Week

    October 01, 2025

    WWF's Marcene Mitchell is encouraged by the innovation, determination, and collaboration of Climate Week. Headwinds remain strong, and the work ahead is enormous. But if Climate Week taught us anything, it’s that momentum builds when we act together—and that’s what will carry us forward.

    A view of a crowded room in the Nature Hub at Climate Week 2025
  • How nature boosts mental health

    September 30, 2025

    Ever take a walk in the woods and feel relaxed? It’s not just you—spending time in nature is scientifically proven to boost your mental health. We spoke with Dr. Stacy Beller Stryer, a pediatrician and associate medical director of Park Rx America. Her organization promotes time in nature as a way to improve both human and planetary health. 

    Rays of sun shine through the trees to illuminate moss
  • The climate case for the not-so-big bad wolf

    September 24, 2025

    In common folklore and media, wolves are often miscast as devious or malicious. But they are more than mere predators: they also play a critical role in ensuring the health and resilience of Earth’s climate.

    Grey wolf (Canis lupus)  female and two wolf puppies
  • Mobilizing finance for nature

    September 23, 2025

    'Nature finance' is money invested in protecting and restoring the natural systems we depend on—forests, rivers, oceans, and more. It includes public, private, and philanthropic capital directed toward conservation and sustainable use of resources.

    A river winds amid dense forest as the sun sets
  • Where do rhinos live? And eight other rhino facts

    September 22, 2025

    Facts about rhinos and what WWF is doing to help protect the species.

    White Rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum), Kenya.
  • How WWF works on polar bear conservation

    WWF’s work on polar bear conservation is rooted in respect: for wildlife, for cultural traditions and rights, and for evidence-based conservation solutions.

    a single polar bear stands on sea ice in Alaska as sea birds fly above
  • A silver lining: Reframing climate through nature

    September 11, 2025

    As we approach Climate Week NYC 2025, it’s impossible to ignore the heated debates surrounding climate action. Yet, amidst the challenges, there’s also a silver lining: the way these debates have reframed the conversation. More and more, climate is being discussed not just in terms of emissions or policies, but through the lens of what unites us all—our desire for clean air and water, healthy communities, and protected natural places.

    Landscape view of a storm cloud rolling over a grassland landscape in the Northern Great Plains
  • What is groundwater and why is it so important?

    September 09, 2025

    Did you know that the drinking water for almost 50% of the people in the United States comes from underground? The term "freshwater" often conjures images of flowing streams or large, cool lakes, but in reality, almost all freshwater in the world (that isn't frozen and locked away in ice caps and glaciers) is groundwater.

    A woman filling up a bucket of water at a makeshift well under a bridge
  • Made by nature

    Nature is the oxygen we breathe and water we drink, but it’s also providing for us in ways we often take for granted or may not even know.

    view from below rubber trees in Amazonas, Brazil
  • By the numbers: Nature and you

    September 09, 2025

    Our lives are fundamentally linked to nature, its forests, fresh water, and oceans. But just how much do we rely on nature and what does nature need from us in return?

    Aerial view of Yukon River with trees and mountaintop
  • Connected by nature: What unites Americans

    September 09, 2025

    WWF's Connected by Nature report explores how deeply Americans value and connect with nature in their daily lives. Conducted by GlobeScan on behalf of WWF, the report finds that people in the US strongly believe that nature plays a vital role in their lives—shaping health, happiness, and cultural identity—and that nature urgently needs protection.

    sunset over Katmai National Park, Alaska
  • New eDNA lab will expand biodiversity monitoring efforts in Bhutan

    September 02, 2025

    Bhutan is leveraging an innovative biodiversity monitoring tool called environmental DNA (eDNA) to create its first nationwide biodiversity assessment without the need for thousands of hours of surveying through harsh and inaccessible terrain. However, analyzing these samples brings new challenges—eDNA samples have to be sent abroad for analysis, which is expensive, time-consuming, and can raise concerns about sharing a country’s genetic material internationally.

    A person collects eDNA samples from a river
  • In the Amazon, an Indigenous community invests in ecotourism

    August 25, 2025

    Tourism also allowed the Kumaruara community to diversify its income. Visitors now participate in a range of activities, from forest hikes and canoeing to witnessing traditional dances and rituals and body painting with dye from the jenipapo fruit

    Visitors on a canoe trip led by Kumaruara leader
  • WWF's Enrique Prunes on restoring the Rio Grande

    August 20, 2025

    Growing up in Chihuahua City, Mexico, Prunes spent summers, holidays, and weekends with his mother’s family in Valle de Allende, a centuries-old Spanish missionary town along the Rio Valle de Allende, where some of the region’s first acequias were established—and are still used and cared for today.

    “I grew up there, diverting water with my uncle and my grandma, to the pecan tree orchards and green chiles and potatoes,” Prunes says. “I think that’s a big part of how I ended up in river conservation.”

    A wide river flows amid a backdrop of trees and mountains
  • Supporting wildlife-friendly infrastructure to help Asian elephants

    August 14, 2025

    Infrastructure development can pose a significant threat to Asian elephants as roads and railways intersect with  elephant habitat and movement. A recent traffic accident on a Malaysian highway that led to the death of an elephant calf highlighted the need for improved measures to enable safe elephant movement.

    An Asian elephant pokes its head through tree branches in Malaysia
  • Protecting the Amazon's critical wildlife areas

    August 12, 2025

    Amazon species, like the jaguar and the river dolphin, have vast ranges of movement, across many country borders, that require keeping their habitats connected and protected to ensure they can thrive. A new study looks at areas where migratory routes align and what we can do to protect them.

    a camera trap image captures a young jaguar on a dirt road in the Peruvian Amazon
  • The hidden cost of food waste

    By learning about the causes and consequences of wasted food, you’re taking the first step toward making a difference. We’re here to equip you with knowledge, tips, and resources to easily reduce food waste in your daily life.

    Damaged and rotting fruits and vegetables
  • WWF on the EPA's plans to overturn the endangerment finding

    August 01, 2025

    This week, the EPA announced his plans to overturn the “endangerment finding” for greenhouse gases, which would strip the agency of its power to regulate climate change pollution. In light of that development, WWF's  Marcene Mitchell and Will Gartshore share their thoughts.

    smoke emitting from coal power plant stacks
  • New Amazon connectivity corridor declared in Ecuador

    July 30, 2025

    In a landmark move for biodiversity conservation and recognition of the essential role of Indigenous territories in protecting nature, the Government of Ecuador has declared the first Amazon connectivity corridor in Ecuador, known as the Palora-Pastaza Connectivity Corridor.

    close up of jaguar face in The Palora-Pastaza Corridor, Amazon, Ecuador