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Liberty Wildlife

Liberty Wildlife nurtures the nature of Arizona: providing quality wildlife rescue and rehabilitation, natural history education, conservation services for the community, and leading by example to demonstrate environmental sustainability in our community.As a leader in wildlife protection and preservation, Liberty Wildlife has had a profound impact on the lives of over 65,000 animals, over 7,800 in 2017 alone. Through oversight, stewardship, and a strong commitment to educational outreach, Liberty Wildlife is also a leader in environmental education providing over 700 programs/year to K-12 youth in Arizona. Our long term commitment is to provide quality care for vulnerable wildlife while creating comprehensive educational experiences coupled with research and conservation projects

Impact Stories
Wildlife SOS

Protecting India's wildlife from habitat loss and human exploitation.

Wildlife Response

Wildlife Response, Inc. (WRI) is dedicated to the preservation of wildlife through rehabilitation and education. One of the most universal challenges today in the battle to save wild things and wild places is how to bond people to the physical world in a powerful enough way to give them the motivation to want to protect and preserve it. It is especially important in our growing suburban and urban communities to increase significant associations connecting people and nature, especially where natural environments and natural experiences are less and less common. On a local level, the steady arrival of new residents to the Hampton Roads area is having a overwhelming impact on our wildlife and natural environment. As we accommodate this progression, it is essential that people who now call the Hampton Roads area home understand the sensitive balance of human and non-human populations, the affect we have on the natural environment, and the best ways in which we can coexist.

Wildlife Center

To support efforts to rescue and rehabilitate native wildlife and their habitats through collaborative partnerships and education.

Wildlife Alliance

Wildlife Alliance’s mission is to protect and preserve forests and wildlife for future generations. We work directly with communities and governments to improve forest management and institute good governance to comprehensively address the devastation of ecosystems and combat the illegal wildlife trade. Our programs in Southeast Asia and the Russian Far East fight forest crime in high biodiversity areas, and actively promote diversified agriculture, community-based ecotourism, and reforestation. We create economic incentives and build political will within communities to preserve the environment.

Cummington Wildlife

Providing Care And Tratment To Orphaned, Injured, Or Ill Wildlife . Preserving Native Birds, Mammals And Reptiles In Western Massachusetts. Public Education Of Native Birds And Animals

ISLAND WILDLIFE

A decade ago, Island Wildlife was merely a tiny woodland cottage. There were no seal pools or eagle flights. Water that trickled from a substandard well now flows from a direct line from St. Mary Lake. 13 years ago our stainless steel, diet preparation kitchen was a funky, hand made garage. There were no weekly deliveries of frozen herring; and if there were, there was no walk in freezer in which to store them. 13 years ago our phone didn’t ring because of an orphaned seal pup on the beach; the pup was just left to die. Island Wildlife Natural Care Centre stands alone in its uniqueness. We are unique in that we maintain no display animals, we are a hospital, not a zoo or aquarium. We are unique in our approach to medicine in that we have integrated conventional veterinary therapies with the best of the naturopathic school of medicine. And we are unique in that we are a teaching facility. The bulk of our animal care staff are interns, fellowships and young veterinarians.

Lutheran World Relief

Affirming God's love for all people, we work with Lutherans and partners around the world to end poverty, injustice and human suffering.

One World Girl

One World Girl (OWG) is a nonprofit organization that equips girls to become changemakers through arts-based learning and community action. Led by the vision and wisdom of girls, we value diversity, creativity, mentorship, global understanding and impact in everything we do. We envision a future where every girl uses her unique abilities, passion and determination to effect long-lasting systemic change as communities transform into secure, tolerant and understanding places that embrace diversity and all are welcomed. Launched in 2017, OWG has built an impressive roster of programming, offered to elementary – high school girls in the New York Metropolitan area, with our participants coming primarily from Westchester, Northern NYC and Nassau County, Long Island. We welcome girls from diverse backgrounds and experiences to learn from one another, build leadership skills, and explore ways to heal divisiveness in their communities and the world. Since inception, OWG has helped more than 250 girls to develop leadership skills, build bridges and come to see themselves as capable and influential changemakers in the world. We have quickly become recognized as an essential organization to support the empowerment and personal development of girls, while having real impact within the community.

Wildlife Warriors Usa

Wildlife Warriors USA Inc was established in 2003 by Steve and Terri Irwin as a way to include and involve caring people in the support and protection of injured, threatened or endangered wildlife - from the individual animal to an entire species. The mission is to be the most effective wildlife conservation organization in the world through the delivery of outstanding outcome-based programs and projects, inclusive of humanity.

Lindsay Wildlife Museum

The mission of Lindsay Wildlife Experience is to connect people with wildlife to inspire responsibility and respect for the world we share. The museum was founded in 1955 by Alexander Lindsay, a local businessman, to teach children about natural sciences, particularly wildlife and their habitats. Over the years, the museum has developed a permanent collection of live, non-releasable native California wildlife and related artifacts. Lindsay is also a leader in the field of wildlife rehabilitation with a full veterinary staff and more than 500 volunteers. It is the first, and frequently only, resource for those who encounter injured, ill, or orphaned wildlife of all species, native mammals, birds, amphibians, and reptiles . During the recent drought years, Lindsay has treated record number of wild animals (more than 5,700 in the first 10 months of 2015). Begun in 1970, this formal wildlife rehabilitation program was the first of its kind in the United States.