Stories

  • Two tigers settle into winter in a new home

    March 03, 2025

    Two Amur tigers, Bohdana and Kuma, are experiencing their first winter in Kazakhstan. The male-female duo is part of a critical reintroduction project. Last September, these captive tigers were transported from a shelter for big cats in the Netherlands to a semi-wild enclosure in the Ile-Balkhash Nature Reserve, Kazakhstan.

    A tiger in the snows of Kazakhstan
  • Using the power of AI to identify and track species

    March 03, 2025

    Now open source, the SpeciesNet platform saves time and saves wildlife

    a tapir hops across a dirt road in the Peruvian Amazon
  • Cold-weather insects: these winter pollinators are super cool(ed)

    February 27, 2025

    Some insects not only survive freezing temps for months at a time but can move about in the snow due to their ability to “supercool” their bodies below the freezing temperature of water. Explore how these critters have adapted to survive the winter. 

    A blue bottle blowfly sits on yellowish orange witch hazel in the winter
  • Building up community-managed marine ecosystems through shared knowledge

    February 25, 2025

    A new WWF report focuses on the Southwest Indian Ocean region, revealing how widespread community-led management efforts are working towards effective and equitable governance across Madagascar, Mozambique, Tanzania, South Africa, and Kenya.

    In the evening, a fishing boat with a single triangle sail sets out on the water
  • Watching wildlife in the winter

    February 20, 2025

    Many animals are active during the winter months, searching for food, finding mates, starting families, or on the move. For this reason, the winter is a great time to look for signs of wildlife and a fun excuse to brave the cold.

    Close up of a red fox's face looking at the camera with snow in the background
  • Setting a New Standard: Groundbreaking Move Aims to Safeguard Crew Welfare and Promote Sustainability in Tuna Fisheries

    February 13, 2025

    In a historic decision, The Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC)—one of five global tuna regional fisheries management organizations (RFMOs) responsible for conserving and sustainably using highly migratory fish stocks, particularly tuna, in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean—has adopted the first-ever Conservation and Management Measure on Crew Labour Standards within a tuna RFMO. This groundbreaking measure ensures enhanced protection for the welfare, safety, and rights of crew members working across the WCPFC-managed fisheries, setting a significant global precedent for labor rights in the fishing industry.

    a fleet of longline fishing vessels in Suva Harbour. Viti Levu, Fiji
  • Protecting the next generation of whales

    February 10, 2025

    Tropical, sheltered waters are the perfect place for humpbacks to breed and raise their vulnerable calves. But mothers and their babies will soon set off on a perilous journey.

    whale breaches water near Juneau, Alaska
  • Meet HoneyRose Smith, WWF’s first Environmental Journalism Scholarship winner

    January 29, 2025

    HoneyRose Smith, a second-year journalism major from Oakland, Calif., was selected as the winner of an essay writing competition. She will receive a $10,000 scholarship and a year-long mentorship with WWF’s Communications and People & Culture teams to help launch her career.

    HoneyRose Smith stands on a beach and looks to the camera
  • Where do bees go in the winter?

    January 27, 2025

    Once the temps drop and snowflakes begin to fall, it’s easy to assume that insects have simply disappeared. And while many do vanish from our view, a significant number of temperate species survive these harsh months by harnessing some truly radical behavior.

    A worker bumble bee climbs the roots of an alpine plant to warm her body
  • Using DNA to protect sea turtles

    WWF Magazine: Spring 2025
    Illegal trade poses an enormous threat to sea turtles, which are trafficked for their meat, eggs, shells, and other parts. And stopping it isn’t easy.
    Four sea turtles swim around a coral reef in the Galapagos
  • Meet the slow loris, a cute primate with a toxic bite

    WWF Magazine: Spring 2025
    Slow lorises are a study in contradictions. With wide eyes and furry bodies, these slow-moving, pint-sized primates look like cuddly stuffed animals.
    A closeup of a slow loris surrounded by green leaves
  • Why policy should recognize the benefits of wildlife

    January 23, 2025

    Wildlife provides vital benefits to people in innumerable ways, from pollinating plants so we have food to eat to dispersing seeds so forests can help regulate our climate. However, new WWF-led research shows that these important contributions are vastly underrepresented across science and policy discussions.

    A sea otter floats on its back among kelp in the ocean
  • Champions of the Great Sea Reef

    WWF Magazine: Spring 2025
    The Great Sea Reef that hugs Fiji’s northwestern shores is a biodiversity hotspot and deeply important to the country and its people.
    Map of Fiji and Great Reef
  • Land, Home, Village, Self

    WWF Magazine: Spring 2025
    The interwoven effort to save reefs, corals, and a modern but traditional way of life
    Closeup of hands weaving dry grass mats
  • Living with Giants

    WWF Magazine: Spring 2025
    Capturing the complex, often uneasy coexistence between humans and elephants in southwest Zambia
    Elephants walking between buildings at night
  • Tracking the movement of spotted hyenas

    WWF Magazine: Spring 2025
    SH2 is “the gold medalist of all hyenas,” says Lise Hanssen, director of Namibia’s Kwando Carnivore Project.
    A hyena captured on camera at night
  • President's Letter: Oceans Rising

    WWF Magazine: Spring 2025
    Gain some distance and you’ll see how much oceans define the dominant color of Earth.
    Carter Roberts
  • In Costa Rica, thousands of tree frogs look for love

    WWF Magazine: Spring 2025
    In the summer of 2018, I traveled to Costa Rica’s Osa Peninsula to study the gliding tree frog.
    Green frogs clinging to blades of grass with many eggs attached
  • Essay: The goslings in lockdown

    WWF Magazine: Spring 2025
    The world was on lockdown, but the local pond didn’t get the memo.
    A watercolor illustration of goslings following adult Canada geese
  • Shellie Collier on building infrastructure to support wildlife

    WWF Magazine: Spring 2025
    Shellie Collier is passionate about wildlife conservation and has been intimately involved in the Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing.
    A highway wildlife crossing under construction
  • Gallery: Sculptures by Abigail Brown

    WWF Magazine: Spring 2025
    The materials in Abigail Brown’s whimsical sculptures often originate in nature—pieces of driftwood, fallen branches, or stones she gathers because they remind her of a specific animal.
    Artwork of a blue wolf head
  • The world’s largest sharks have a haven near Tanzania

    WWF Magazine: Spring 2025
    With its cartilaginous body and cold blood, the whale shark is decidedly not a whale.
    View of a whale shark from above with small yellow fish
  • Indigenous efforts help restore Guatemala's Totonicapán Forest

    WWF Magazine: Spring 2025
    Since 2021, WWF’s Russell E. Train Education for Nature (EFN) Program has sponsored EcoLogic Development Fund, a nonprofit that supports Indigenous efforts to restore the forest.
    Women planting seeds in ground