World Wildlife Foundation
What is the WWF?
The WWF (World Wildlife Foundation) is an organization that addresses major global problems that affect people and wildlife. They have split their efforts into 6 areas, Forests, Marine, Freshwater, Climate, Food and Wildlife.
The WWF (World Wildlife Foundation) is an organization that addresses major global problems that affect people and wildlife. They have split their efforts into 6 areas, Forests, Marine, Freshwater, Climate, Food and Wildlife.
Summary of their History:
The WWF started off by only helping wildlife (the company started April 29th, 1961), but they now have branched out more to help problems that people suffer from all around the world. Their new and evolved strategy is listed in the above paragraph.
The WWF started off by only helping wildlife (the company started April 29th, 1961), but they now have branched out more to help problems that people suffer from all around the world. Their new and evolved strategy is listed in the above paragraph.
Carter Roberts:
The man in the picture is Carter Roberts, the President and CEO of the World Wildlife Fund in the US, you can see a better photo of him below.
The man in the picture is Carter Roberts, the President and CEO of the World Wildlife Fund in the US, you can see a better photo of him below.
Adopt an Animal:
The Adopt an Animal program that the WWF offers means that you can donate some money for an animal in order to get some things in return. Most of the donation kits offer a plush toy of the endangered animal that you would like to donate to, you do not physically get the animal and you only adopt the animal symbolically. This is a great initiative that helps raise funds for endangered animals whose population has been effected by human efforts.
The Adopt an Animal program that the WWF offers means that you can donate some money for an animal in order to get some things in return. Most of the donation kits offer a plush toy of the endangered animal that you would like to donate to, you do not physically get the animal and you only adopt the animal symbolically. This is a great initiative that helps raise funds for endangered animals whose population has been effected by human efforts.
Inner Animal:
My inner animal was the Barn owl, its description is in this picture above.
![Picture](/uploads/4/7/3/4/47341519/5298934.jpg?540)
The Giant Panda:
The Giant Panda (Also known by its scientific name, ailuropoda melanoleuca) is an endangered and the rarest member of the bear family, native to China, the Chinese consider it as a national treasure. They live in the mountains of western China, where they survive mainly on bamboo which they must eat between 10 and 40 kilograms of per day. They are endangered as there are an estimated 1,826 pandas in the wild, the reason they are endangered is because of the threat of humans hunting for their skin and chopping down the forest that they live in for bamboo.
The Giant Panda (Also known by its scientific name, ailuropoda melanoleuca) is an endangered and the rarest member of the bear family, native to China, the Chinese consider it as a national treasure. They live in the mountains of western China, where they survive mainly on bamboo which they must eat between 10 and 40 kilograms of per day. They are endangered as there are an estimated 1,826 pandas in the wild, the reason they are endangered is because of the threat of humans hunting for their skin and chopping down the forest that they live in for bamboo.
Umky Patrol Summary:
The Umky Patrol team is a team that was formed with help from the WWF to keep polar bears and other animals from a town in the Arctic. Due to global warming, the polar bears had less space to live as the ice that they previously had live in was melting, this forced them to start getting closer to the towns that people lived in. The Umky team uses sticks and other tools to non-lethally push the polar bears into the water.
The Umky Patrol team is a team that was formed with help from the WWF to keep polar bears and other animals from a town in the Arctic. Due to global warming, the polar bears had less space to live as the ice that they previously had live in was melting, this forced them to start getting closer to the towns that people lived in. The Umky team uses sticks and other tools to non-lethally push the polar bears into the water.