Wildlife Conservation Network
Founded | 2002 |
---|---|
Founder | Charles Knowles, John Lukas and Akiko Yamazaki[1] |
Type | Non-profit organization |
Focus | Environmentalism |
Location | |
Area served | World wide |
Method | Community based partnerships, fundraising, consultancy |
Key people |
|
Website | wildnet |
The Wildlife Conservation Network (WCN) is a United States–based 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that protects endangered wildlife by supporting conservationists in the field who promote coexistence between wildlife and people. WCN does this by providing its partners with capital, strategic capacity-building services, training, and operational support. WCN has been given a top rating amongst wildlife conservation charities, with a four star rating on Charity Navigator.[2]
Founded in 2002, Wildlife Conservation Network was built on a venture capital fundraising model to identify entrepreneurial conservationists and projects and give them the support they need to effectively run their programs. WCN brings donors together with field conservationists to develop personal relationships and allow donors to see how their support is making an impact for wildlife. WCN’s 100% donation model means every dollar donated to a specific species is guaranteed to go to the conservationists who protect that species.[3]
Conservation Partners
[edit]Wildlife Conservation Network forms partnerships with field-based conservation projects committed to protecting endangered wildlife and gives them the support and resources they need for their work. Partners as of 2022 include:
- Andean Cat Alliance (Argentina, Bolivia, Chile and Peru)
- Cheetah Conservation Botswana (Botswana)
- Cheetah Conservation Fund (Namibia)
- Conservation Through Public Health (Uganda)
- Ethiopian Wolf Conservation Program (Ethiopia)
- Ewaso Lions (Kenya)
- Global Penguin Society (Worldwide)
- Grévy's Zebra Trust (Ethiopia and Kenya)
- Hutan (Malaysian Borneo)
- Macaw Recovery Network (Costa Rica)
- MarAlliance (Belize, Honduras, Mexico, Panama, and others)
- MareCet (Malaysia)
- Niassa Lion Project (Mozambique)
- Okapi Conservation Project (Democratic Republic of Congo)
- Painted Dog Conservation (Zimbabwe)
- Proyecto Tití (cotton-top tamarin) (Colombia)
- Rwanda Wildlife Conservation Association (Rwanda)
- Saiga Conservation Alliance (Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Russia and Turkmenistan)
- Save The Elephants (Congo, Gabon, Kenya, Mali and South Africa)
- Small Wild Cat Conservation Foundation (Borneo, Sumatra, Chile, China and others)
- Snow Leopard Conservancy (Pakistan, Nepal, Tajikistan, Mongolia, Russia and India)[4]
- Spectacled Bear Conservation Society (Peru)[5]
Wildlife Funds
[edit]WCN's Wildlife Funds tackle the diverse range of challenges that certain species face in a way that a single field organization could not. These Funds invest in projects from many organizations to protect species across the entirety of their habitats.
Elephant Crisis Fund
[edit]The Elephant Crisis Fund (ECF), a partnership between WCN and Save the Elephants, was established in 2013 to bring the ivory crisis to an end and create a better future for elephants in Africa. While there are signs of hope with elephant poaching in decline, the ivory trade continues across Africa and the ECF remains committed to ending it. The ECF has also expanded its strategies to address other threats to elephants by supporting projects that promote human-elephant coexistence and protect elephant landscapes, giving elephants the space to survive and recover.
Organizations supported by the ECF include Wildlife Conservation Society, Tsavo Trust, and Wildlife Direct, among many others.
Lion Recovery Fund
[edit]The Lion Recovery Fund (LRF) was created in 2017 by WCN to give conservationists the support they need to address the biggest threats to lions. The LRF invests in projects that protect lions from poaching, retaliatory killing, defend and restore lion habitat, and protect lion prey species from bushmeat poachers and competition with domestic livestock.
Organizations supported by the LRF include Panthera, Wildlife Conservation Society, WildAid, WildCru, Big Life Foundation, and Ruaha Carnivore Project, to name a few.
Pangolin Crisis Fund
[edit]Pangolins are hunted for their scales, body parts, and meat, making them the most illegally trafficked mammals on Earth. All eight species of pangolins are dangerously close to extinction. To prevent pangolins from vanishing, WCN and Save Pangolins created the Pangolin Crisis Fund (PCF) in 2019 to protect pangolins and their habitats, help combat illegal wildlife traffickers, and reduce the demand for pangolin products in Asia and Africa.
Organizations supported by the PCF include the Tikki Hywood Foundation, Wildlife Crime Prevention, the African Pangolin Working Group, World Wildlife Fund-Pakistan, and WildAid, among others.
Rhino Recovery Fund
[edit]In 2020, WCN launched the Rhino Recovery Fund (RRF) to protect rhinos from poachers and safeguard their habitats. The RRF supports projects that fight against rhino poaching and the trafficking of rhino horns. The Fund also supports projects that restore rhino landscapes and bolster protected area management for rhinos in the wild.
Organizations supported by the RRF include the Frankfurt Zoological Society, the Mozambique Wildlife Alliance, Tsavo Trust, Wildlife ACT, Save the Rhino Trust Namibia, and the International Rhino Foundation, to name a few.
Emergency Relief Fund
[edit]In response to the upheaval created by the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, WCN created its Emergency Relief Fund (ERF). The ERF supports struggling conservationists and local communities who protect wildlife during emergency crises, which often generate devastating health, social, economic, and political challenges. This leads to increased pressure on wildlife, halted conservation fundraising, and the destabilization of security for communities.
As the COVID-19 pandemic begins to subside, the ERF has expanded to help conservationists get through a variety of emergencies, such as drought and civil conflict.
California Wildlife Program
[edit]In 2021, WCN began working in North America by launching the California Wildlife Program (CWP), which connects habitats for fragmented puma populations and other California wildlife. By creating designated wildlife corridors, the CWP will reconnect isolated puma populations and prevent them from vanishing due to urban development. This will also protect many other California species that share the same ecosystems, including deer, foxes, owls, salamanders, and many more.
Rising Wildlife Leaders
[edit]Scholarship Program
[edit]Local people are wildlife’s true stewards, so to support conservationists from within these communities, WCN launched its Scholarship Program in 2006. This program focuses on conservation students committed to working on projects in their respective countries. As of 2022, the Scholarship Program has supported 174 emerging conservationists across 46 countries, helping fund their studies so they can take prominent roles as tomorrow’s conservation leaders.
Career Program
[edit]For local conservationists who are already established as leaders and are looking to expand their skills, WCN established its Career Program in 2021. This program invests in the growth of those already leading conservation efforts in their communities around the world. In its inaugural year, the Career Program has invested in six promising conservationists so they can create longer lasting impacts for wildlife and local communities.
Wildlife Conservation Expo
[edit]WCN hosts a semi-annual event, the Wildlife Conservation Expo, that brings together donors and conservationists from around the world to hear the latest news from the field, connect with fellow wildlife advocates, and celebrate wildlife. Wildlife Conservation Expos draw thousands of attendees from a global community dedicated to wildlife conservation. Expo features presentations on the latest work from WCN's Conservation Partners, Wildlife Funds, and other programs, and also features other conservation experts and organizations as guest speakers. Through these presentations, conservationists take attendees on a journey into the field, showing them what it takes to defend endangered wildlife and promote coexistence between them and people.
While Expo has historically been an in-person event held in the San Francisco Bay Area, it has expanded to also take place online to include a wider global audience. [6] Notable keynote speakers have included Dr. Jane Goodall,[7] Dr. Iain Douglas-Hamilton,[8] Peter Matthiessen[9] Dr. Claudio Sillero-Zubiri[10] and Dr. Greg Rasmussen.[10] Past guest speakers have included African Marine Mammal Conservation Organization, MareCet, and the Tikki Hywood Foundation.
Other programs
[edit]Solar project
[edit]In 2005, WCN started providing solar electric systems such as solar water pumps, cookers, lighting, hot water and water purification systems to its partner projects in South America, Africa and Asia.[11]
References
[edit]- ^ Estrella, Cicero A. (7 February 2003). "Wildlife Inc. / Silicon Valley business whizzes put their savvy to protecting endangered species around the world". San Francisco Chronicle.
- ^ "Wildlife Conservation Network". Charity Navigator.
- ^ "Disney Honors WCN Director Isabella Rossellini and WCN Partner Iain Douglas-Hamilton as Wildlife Advocates". Business Wire.
- ^ "Wildlife Projects". Wildlife Conservation Network.
- ^ "Spectacled Bears". Wildlife Conservation Network.
- ^ "AFC Exhibiting at Wildlife Conservation Network Expo". Artists for Conservation.
- ^ "San Francisco, CA: Dr. Goodall's Keynote Speech at the WCN Expo". The Jane Goodall Institute.
- ^ "Wildlife Conservation Expo". The Eyes of Thailand.
- ^ "Wildlife expo showcases leading conservationists". Los Altos Town Crier. Archived from the original on 2011-10-02. Retrieved 2011-08-02.
- ^ a b "Wildlife Conservation Network Expo". Wildlife Conservation Network.
- ^ "Wildlife Conservation Network Receives $1 Million Gift for Scholarship Program; Scholarship Invests in Local People As Future Leaders of Wildlife Conservation Around the World". Business Wire.[permanent dead link ]