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The Nature Conservancy is addressing the world’s most pressing conservation problems with solutions that benefit people and nature.
Our compelling mission and clear vision create the foundation for rewarding and challenging careers. And you don’t have to be a scientist to work here! Contribute to our conservation goals in fields including policy, marketing, finance, human resources and so much more.
Whatever your expertise, you’ll be in an environment that nurtures employees by encouraging innovation and professional development. Join us!
June 2010 – Pichincha Province, Ecuador. FONAG protects watersheds supplying the capital’s 2 million people with 80 percent of their freshwater. Nearly $1 million each year goes to conservation projects in the surrounding watersheds. © 2010 Erika Nortemann/The Nature Conservancy
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Visitors to the tropical rainforest of Costa Rica's Osa Peninsula explore a "cave" inside the roots of the Ajo tree (Caryocar costarricense), an endemic and endangered timber species. Photograph from The Nature Conservancy book; COSTA RICA: Voluntary Conservation in Costa Rica. © The Nature Conservancy/Sergio Pucci
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Portrait of TNC's lead scientist, M. A. Sanjayan at the Worldwide Office in Arlington, Virginia. May 2007. © Erika Nortemann/The Nature Conservancy
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Female leatherbacks swim massive distances to beaches where they lay 70 eggs an hour. © Jeff Jonover
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Thanks to you and the support of 1 million members around the globe we are protecting the most ecologically important places on the planet. © TNC
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Deniziu Araújo Ticuna, of the Tikuna indigenous people and graduate of the Amazon Indigenous Training Center in Mindú Park, INPA, Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil. Denizio photographed at the Amazon Indigenous Training Center (CAFI). © Fernanda Preto