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    • Home
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      • amWILD!
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  • Through My Lens
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  • About
    • amWILD!
    • Beneficiaries
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amWILD! Beneficiaries (2024/25)

amWILD! about SEA TURTLES

amWILD! about SEA TURTLES

amWILD! about SEA TURTLES

Sea turtles are endangered. Since 1988, the Kosgoda Sea Turtle Project in Sri Lanka has monitored local sea turtle activity and protects local nesting sites.  It also rescues eggs and incubates them in a hatchery where they are safe from predators and poachers. Upon hatching,  the babies are given several days to grow before being release

Sea turtles are endangered. Since 1988, the Kosgoda Sea Turtle Project in Sri Lanka has monitored local sea turtle activity and protects local nesting sites.  It also rescues eggs and incubates them in a hatchery where they are safe from predators and poachers. Upon hatching,  the babies are given several days to grow before being released into the sea. 'Headstarting' maximizes the likelihood that hatchlings survive their early stages of life.

amWILD! about ELEPHANTS

amWILD! about SEA TURTLES

amWILD! about SEA TURTLES

Forest elephants are critically endangered. For decades, large families of elephant's have been gathering at the Dzanga Bai Clearing in the Central African Republic each day to drink, bath and play. They are vital to keeping the Congo Basin Rainforest, with its giant carbon-sequestering trees, healthy. That is until Sudanese ivory poacher

Forest elephants are critically endangered. For decades, large families of elephant's have been gathering at the Dzanga Bai Clearing in the Central African Republic each day to drink, bath and play. They are vital to keeping the Congo Basin Rainforest, with its giant carbon-sequestering trees, healthy. That is until Sudanese ivory poachers killed over 26 animals including 4 calves in 2013. Since then, a special anti-poaching collective works 24/7 to keep the herd safe.

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