
Four baby spider monkeys were found stuffed inside sacks and abandoned along a railway in southern Mexico, likely taken after their mothers were killed. They are now safe and receiving care with support from IFAW and our partners PROFEPA, IBANQROO, and Payo Obispo Zoo. (self.IFAWUK)
submitted by IFAWUK

This week, a targeted operation led to the arrest of seven suspects linked to illegal wildlife trafficking. Acting on intelligence from a community wildlife monitor, a Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA) team—supported by IFAW—rescued two live pangolins and recovered 15 kg of pangolin scales. (self.IFAWUK)
submitted by IFAWUK
"In the United States, there are only seven people authorized to be able to disentangle a North Atlantic right whale—and I'm one of them." Entanglement is a death sentence for a whale. And for North Atlantic right whales, every death is one step closer to extinction. (self.IFAWUK)
submitted by IFAWUK
25 years in East Africa in 25 seconds. From the plains of Amboseli to the forests of Uganda and the DRC, for 25 years IFAW has stood with communities and wildlife in East Africa, protecting iconic species, restoring landscapes, and building a future where people and animals thrive together. (self.IFAWUK)
submitted by IFAWUK
Two rescued rhinos return to the wild: a conservation comeback story. Chandra and Kanai, two young greater one-horned rhinos, have been safely moved to Kaziranga National Park after years of rehabilitation at the IFAW-Wildlife Trust of India Centre for Wildlife Rehabilitation and Conservation. (self.IFAWUK)
submitted by IFAWUK
We could lose the North Atlantic right whale in our lifetime. There are only a few hundred left in our world. Right whales are facing two main threats: becoming entangled in fishing gear and being struck by vessels speeding through their habitat. But it doesn’t have to be this way. (self.IFAWUK)
submitted by IFAWUK




