News

ZSL's Wildlife Winners lottery is a fun way to support wildlife in need all over the world. Every entry helps fund our ...
Scientists have outlined the steps world leaders must take to save the world’s most threatened animals and plants from extinction. In the first ever assessment of its kind for all 10,443 species ...
Our new prize draw gives players across Great Britain the chance to win big and help protect wildlife, as we launch our first ever lottery - unveiled today with a little help from the animals at ...
Ivindo National Park, Gabon. Mirroring our wider organisational commitment to restoring nature and helping people and wildlife thrive together, the Biodiverse Landscapes Fund (BLF) programme in the ...
Help us bring the most threatened species back from the brink of extinction. More than 40,000 species are at risk of extinction. From the world’s most trafficked wild mammal, the pangolin, to the ...
Since it was declared biologically dead in 1957 in parts, the tidal stretch of the River Thames has made an astounding recovery. Results of the first complete health check of the River Thames were ...
The Living Planet Index informs WWF’s bi-annual Living Planet Report 2024.. What does this mean for nature, and what do we need to do to protect nature? What is the Living Planet Index? The Living ...
Dr Andrew Terry, our Director of Conservation and Policy and co-author of the study said: “At a time when biodiversity is being lost at unprecedented rates, the return of the scimitar horned oryx can ...
A Future for Bengal Tigers . There is still much work to be done to bring Bengal tiger populations close to their historic numbers, but the success of India’s growing population – coming shortly after ...
Wind farm developers are being urged to factor local seabird population trends into plans to avoid contributing to species decline, says new ZSL-led study. Offshore windfarm developments could avoid ...
“Adapted for the warm sub-Saharan bush, African wild dogs are likely one of the last animals to cross your mind, yet we’ve shown that just like polar bears and coral reefs, the future of wild dogs ...