Wildlife

With nearly a quarter of all mammal species and a third of amphibians threatened with extinction, there’s an urgent need to safeguard wildlife and the places in which they live.

Our video player uses flash. However, you can download the video as a mov file.

The growing and unsustainable demand by people for natural resources is at the heart of the problem. The demands made by human activities – such as agriculture, forestry, energy production, road building and poaching – are all having a serious impact.

The growing danger from climate change could also result in devastating consequences for our natural environment in the coming years.

With limited resources and limited time to make the required impact, WWF has had to focus its efforts on species considered to be of special ecological, economic and cultural importance. We work to stabilise or increase their numbers through practical conservation programmes and by challenging the trade in endangered wildlife.

WWF also works with business, government and local communities to create sustainable solutions that take account of the needs of both people as well as nature. Only by doing this will we ensure good governance of our natural resources.

Why protect rare and endangered species?

Protecting the world's species and their habitats lies at the heart of WWF's mission to conserve the earth's biodiversity and was the prime reason for the organisation's establishment in 1961.

While important in their own right, species are also critical for maintaining the fundamental balance of ecosystems.

As charismatic icons, species also provide unique opportunities for promoting and communicating critically important conservation and environmental issues.



Bookmark and Share

How you can help

Join WWF Today

Take action

Latest wildlife news

CITES can help save tuna and tigers

The largest ever wildlife trade convention (known as CITES Cop15) runs from 13-25 March. It's a unique chance for world governments to protect species in our oceans, as well as halting a worldwide poaching crisis.

Another chance to watch The End of the Line

Channel 4 is screening the powerful documentary The End of the Line on Saturday 6 March at 7.15pm, in case you missed it last year. The film highlights a growing crisis in our oceans – one that affects sealife, consumers and the seafood industry.

Illegal logging for paper industry and forest clearing  for Palm oil plantation © WWF-Canon / Alain COMPOST

WWF, Panorama and palm oil

On Monday 22 February, BBC One broadcast a special Panorama investigation into the palm oil industry. WWF helped set up the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO). Here’s our statement on the subject.