Almost 90% of wild plants and 75% of leading global crops depend on animal pollination. One out of every three mouthfuls of our food depends on pollinators such as bees. Crops that depend on ...
From the Jurassic Coast to the Thames Path, we have places in some of the UK's best walking and hiking events. Join Team WWF today and do it for your planet.
Everyone loves a hedgehog, but in the UK numbers of these prickly mammals have plummeted – and they really need our help if they’re to rebound. As the weather warms up and these wonderful little ...
Humanity is facing a Triple Challenge. We urgently need to prevent catastrophic climate change by keeping global warming below 1.5°C. We need to halt and reverse the loss of nature. And we need to do ...
Reacting to Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs speech at Oxford Farming Conference, Sofia Parente, head of policy (production) WWF said: “As the Secretary of State recognised ...
With a new UK Government in place, this is a crucial time for us to make it clear that action on nature and climate is a priority for people all over the UK. In this special episode of Call of the ...
Did you know that your favourite chocolate originates from the cacao plant? This grows wild in Central and South America and cultivating it can be a forest-friendly source of income for people who ...
The Adélie is the littlest, and also the most widespread, species of penguin in the Antarctic. They might look a bit clumsy on land, but penguins are brilliant swimmers. They can dive down to 180m – ...
Today we face the double, interlinked emergencies of human-induced climate change and the loss of biodiversity, threatening the well-being of current and future generations. As our future is ...
We’ve seen fires devastating precious places like the Amazon rainforest. But what are the facts and what are the myths about the destruction of our forests? We’re here to help. While growing demand ...
Polar bears are the planet’s biggest land-based carnivores – although they actually spend most of their lives around water and ice (their Latin name means ‘sea bear’). So they’re at particular risk ...
Powerful and majestic, the king of the beasts has no natural predators. But unthinkably, African lion numbers have plummeted by over 40% in the last three generations, due to loss of living space and ...