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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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Diversity is critical to our mission as an organization.
Feeding time at Lewa Wildlife Conservancy in Kenya. The Conservancy has partnered with Lewa Wildlife Conservancy in an effort to help preserve the grasslands in Kenya and Tanzania. © Bill Waldman
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A team of TNC fire specialists from the U.S. and Mexico along with partners from Mexico's Pronatura explore the unique white gypsum dunes located within the Cuatro Cienegas valley of the state of Coahuila, Mexico. The group spent several days exploring the valley and discussing the possibility of using prescribed burns to restore and preserve the natural grasslands of the area. Chihuahuan Desert Ecoregion. © Mark Godfrey/TNC
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Otgonbaatar Tsog, a Mongolian herder, talks with California rancher Bob Blanchard during a Conservancy-sponsored study tour. © Mark Godfrey/TNC
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Forestry workers show mahogany seeds and seed pods at Hill Bank in the Rio Bravo Conservation and Management Area of Belize, Central America. © Tony Rath
Explore just a few of the reasons we're able to confront conservation threats at the largest scale.
UC Santa Cruz divers, Kathy Gilles and Chris Reeves, harvest giant kelp (Macrocystis) off Asilomar, Monterey, California. © Richard Herrmann
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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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We're addressing Latin America's most pressing conservation issues. Read the Story
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