Our blog & news: Get involved to help wildlife

 
 

"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world;
indeed, it's the only thing that ever has." 
Margaret Mead, American anthropologist, 1901-1978
 


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Category: Help a species

  1. Wild Koala Day is on 3rd May 2020 - please add your voice to help koalas

    Posted on

    It's the 3rd May and that means one thing - it's Wild Koala Day :-)

    Please visit Koala Corner to see how you can help these adorable animals and meantime, here's a delightful clip from You Tube to enjoy:

     

    Here is the petition mentioned in the clip - if koalas don't have trees, there won't be any koalas, so please sign it and spread the word!  Thank you!#

    And here are others.  Please, please add your voice. 

    Speak for me
    This koala can't speak up - but you and I certainly can. 
    Please sign these petitions. 
    ©Change.org

    Stop Shenhua Mining Koala Habitat on Gomeroi ancestral lands 

    Save Koala habitat areas

    Koalas belong to the world, not just Australia

    Stop the Wallarah 2 Mine from impacting vital Koala habitat

    Protect our koalas

    Thank you :-) 

    Visit Koala Corner with this website to find more ways you can  help koalas, including 11 Ways to help koalas.

     

  2. Petition to help African wildlife and people from the African Wildlife Foundation

    Posted on

    Please, please take a look at this petition! 

    The African Wildlife Foundation sent an email to say that the social distancing we are all doing has consequences for lions, elephants and other species in Africa’s 8,400 protected areas.

    Please sign and share - Thank you


    What has happened with the breakout of COVID-19 and social distancing?

    Well, tourism has plummeted.  As a result, so has the revenue the safari industry receives.  The industry budgets revenue to dedicate to wildlife protection and protected areas management.

    Wildlife and the people who protect it – rangers and community members who are employed in tourism and related businesses – will pay the price of this decline.

    Please, please sign this petition and show support for Africa’s critical areas.  They are home to endangered species and they also drive economies that support wildlife.

    By signing this petition, the African Wildlife Foundation says that you are on the side of:

    • Africa’s already threatened species who rely on protected areas for safe habitat
    • The health of some of the most biodiverse habitats in the world, which are found in protected areas
    • Local people who rely on sustainable nature tourism for a living

    Please sign and share - Thank you
    Please sign this petition today.
    and give African wildlife a voice

    Visit the African Wildlife Foundation's website here

     to find out more about the work they are doing

    and how you can help

  3. Please see this video from Gravitas - how nature is reclaiming its spaces due to the Coronavirus

    Posted on

    Sometimes you see something on the internet or on television that really hits you hard and makes a point extremely well.

    I saw this video, this afternoon, and I wanted to share it with you.  Please share it with everyone you can.

    The ultimate message is that we SHARE this planet.  It demonstrates how dominant the human race has become - and how selfish.   I am not going to tell you anymore about it - please just watch it for yourself.   Here it is:



    Thank you, Gravitas.

    Please vow to make a difference today. 
    Find out how to reduce your impact on the earth's resources here.

     

     

     

     

  4. Health, Koalas and Forests

    Posted on

    Deborah Tabart OAM is Chairman of the Australian Koala Foundation

    And today, she sent out the most beautiful picture of an adorable koala, thinking it’s what we need right now.  Deborah, thank you.  It certainly cheered me up.

     Save the Koala - Join the Koala Army
    Save the Koala - Join the Koala Army

    One of the things Deborah said in the email she’d sent us was that she thinks the issues we are facing – the wildfires around the world and the coronavirus – stem in part from our lack of respect for the natural world, our lack of care for animals and our need to develop at all costs.

    I agree.  I remember once reading a phrase, Look after the earth and she will look after you.  Well, we have not looked after the world and she is finding it increasingly difficult to look after us.  We reap what we sow.  As Deborah says, we do not respect our planet, our forests, our rivers, our oceans.  We exploit them and abuse them far too much.

    My hope is that this virus will give us all the chance to reflect on what really matters and that it will give the planet a chance to do some healing.  We need to look at how we are living and what we are doing, and really start thinking about what we want going forward.

    The 21st March is International Day of Forests.  

    We need to love our forests around the world and to care for them like never before.  

    We are dependent on them. 

    Without forests that are in good health, we cannot be healthy.  They are the lungs of our planet.

    Without oceans and rivers that are in good health, we cannot be healthy.  They are our blood supply.

    Without air that is clean, we cannot be healthy.

    Without biodiversity, the right balance of species across the planet – I include humans in that – we cannot be healthy.  Every species has its place in nature – she has planned things pretty carefully and we are destroying that balance through activities dedicated to our own ends.

    So back to our Koalas.   Will you help put pressure on the Australian government to nudge them in the right direction and protect the koala, with the Koala Protection Act?  Protect one species and you protect far more. 

    Save the Koala - find out more about the Koala Protection Act

    Save the Koala - find out more about the Koala Protection Act

    Find out more here.

    And keep safe

     

    Images above ©Australian Koala Foundation

     

  5. Can you spare £3 to help the Sumatran tiger?

    Posted on

    Sumatran tigers are trapped and dying.

     

    Question:  Why?

     

    Answer:   snares. 


    So why are Sumatran tigers trapped and dying from snares? 

     

    It’s because snares are brutal and the perfect thing for poachers to use in their quest to take down the beautiful Sumatran tiger.

     

    Bali tigers and Javan tigers died this way.   And the need to change the status of the Sumatran tiger is urgent.  For the Sumatran tiger, the smallest of all the tiger sub-species, is going the same way.

     

    There are less than 400 Sumatran tigers living in the wild – that’s an estimate.  These cats are generally shy, and keen to avoid people.  The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species lists them as Critically Endangered.

     

    Why are their numbers so low?

    • Poaching
    • Habitat loss
    • Human-wildlife conflict

     

    Kerinci Seblat National Park and the Ulu Masen and Leuser ecosystems of Aceh on the Indonesian island of Sumatra are global priority areas for tiger conservation.

    Please help Sumatran tigers with a £3 donationPlease help Sumatran tigers with a £3 donation

    So what can we all do to help?

    In an email today that I received, Fauna and Flora International are asking Care2 members to donate £3 today to help equip their highly trained rangers.

    The rangers will work closely with networks of informants who will guide them to active poaching efforts – meaning they can get rid of the snares.

     

    Please donate today

     

    Who are Fauna and Flora International?

    FFI is an international wildlife conservation organisation, with a science-based approach to conservation.  Founded, in 1903, they have saved species from extinction over the last 100 years and – helped by their Vice President, Sir David Attenborough – they have helped bring mountain gorillas back from the brink.  Their mission is to conserve threatened species and ecosystems worldwide, choosing solutions that are sustainable, based on sound science, and which take into account human needs.  They have over 140 conservation projects around the world and they work in over 40 countries. 

    Visit FFI's website here

     

    https://www.fauna-flora.org/species/sumatran-tiger