How Your Change, Changes the World

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How Your Change, Changes the World 17 1 17 17 17 1 31 17 11 11 14 22 30 23 25 15 20 24 13 14 6 19 29 5 8 12 11 How your 2 9 13 18 28 16 change, 27 26 32 11 changes 7 4 11 4 21 3 11 the world 10 11 2011-2015 Projects Supported by Quarters for Conservation United States (1.) Sea Turtles Africa Africa (cont) 17. Snow Leopard • China, India, Central and South America University of Central Florida Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Pakistan 24. Iguanas • Honduras Butterflies 2. Chimpanzee & Western Lowland 10. Cheetah • South Africa Snow Leopard Trust International Iguana Foundation Florida Butterfly Swallow-tailed Kite Gorilla • Republic of the Congo Cheetah Outreach Monitoring Network Goualougo Triangle Ape Project Avian Research and 18. Slow Loris • Indonesia/Java 25. Guatemalan Wildlife • Guatemala Conservation Institute Little Fireface Project ARCAS Guatemala Coral 3. Cheetah • Namibia Africa/Asia Environmental Department Coral Restoration Cheetah Conservation Fund Atala Butterfly 11. Rhinoceros • Indonesia, India, 19. Sea Turtles • Sri Lanka Foundation Brevard Zoo Zimbabwe, Botswana, South Africa, Sri Lanka Turtle Conservation Project 26. Amphibians • Bolivia 4. African Carnivores • Botswana Swaziland, Vietnam Bolivian Amphibian Initiative Dolphin and Namibia East Coast International Rhino Foundation 20. Pangolin • Vietnam Sarasota Dolphin African Predator Conservation Diamondback Terrapin Save Vietnam’s Wildlife Pangolin 27. Giant Armadillo • Brazil Research Project Research Organization and Brevard Zoo Conservation Program Pantanal Giant Armadillo Project Cheetah Conservation Fund Asia Florida Grasshopper Sparrow Florida Scrub-Jay 28. Tapirs • Brazil Kissimmee Prairie Preserve’s 5. Western Lowland Gorillas • Brevard Zoo 12. Orangutan • Indonesia/Sumatra Australia The Lowland Tapir Conservation Citizen Support Organization Republic of Congo Rainforest Rescue 21. Cassowary • Australia Initiative Mangroves Wildlife Conservation Society Monofilament Rainforest Rescue Brevard Zoo 13. Asian Rhino • India/Indonesia 29. Cotton-top Tamarin • Columbia Monofilament Recovery 6. Chimpanzee • Sierra Leone International Rhino Foundation Caribbean Proyecto Titi and Recycling Program Oyster Mats Tacugama Chimpanzee Sanctuary Oyster Restoration 14. Saola • Vietnam and Laos 22. Iguanas • Jamaica 30. Hicatee Turtle • Belize Northern Right Whale 7. Giraffe • Namibia Program Saola Working Group International Iguana Foundation and Turtle Survival Alliance Marine Resources Council Giraffe Conservation Fund Jamaican iguanas on IIL and Brevard County Goat Island Pollinators 15. Asian Hornbill • Thailand 31. Jaguar • Mexico 8. Sea Turtle • Kenya Blank Park Zoo Hornbill Research Foundation Northern Jaguar Project Red Cockaded Woodpecker Plant.Grow.Fly Program Watamu Turtle Watch 23. Roatán Spiny-tailed Iguana • Citizens for the St. Sebastian 16. Komodo Dragon • Indonesia Roatán 32. Andean Cat • Bolivia Preserve, Inc. 9. Grevy’s Zebra • Kenya Shoreline Restoration Komodo Dragon Species Survival Plan International Iguana Foundation Andean Cat Alliance Brevard Zoo Grevy’s Zebra Trust .
Recommended publications
  • The Saola Or Spindlehorn Bovid Pseudoryx Nghetinhensis in Laos
    ORYX VOL 29 NO 2 APRIL 1995 The saola or spindlehorn bovid Pseudoryx nghetinhensis in Laos George B. Schaller and Alan Rabinowitz In 1992 the discovery of a new bovid, Pseudoryx nghetinhensis, in Vietnam led to speculation that the species also occurred in adjacent parts of Laos. This paper describes a survey in January 1994, which confirmed the presence of P. ngethinhensis in Laos, although in low densities and with a patchy distribution. The paper also presents new information that helps clarify the phylogenetic position of the species. The low numbers and restricted range ofP. ngethinhensis mean that it must be regarded as Endangered. While some admirable moves have been made to protect the new bovid and its habitat, more needs to be done and the authors recommend further conservation action. Introduction area). Dung et al. (1994) refer to Pseudoryx as the Vu Quang ox, but, given the total range of In May 1992 Do Tuoc and John MacKinnon the animal and its evolutionary affinities (see found three sets of horns of a previously un- below), we prefer to call it by the descriptive described species of bovid in the Vu Quang local name 'saola'. Nature Reserve of west-central Vietnam The village of Nakadok, where saola horns (Stone, 1992). The discovery at the end of the were found, lies at the end of the Nakai-Nam twentieth century of a large new mammal in a Theun National Biodiversity Conservation region that had been visited repeatedly by sci- Area (NNTNBCA), which at 3500 sq km is the entific and other expeditions (Delacour and largest of 17 protected areas established by Jabouille, 1931; Legendre, 1936) aroused in- Laos in October 1993.
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  • Rowland Ward Ltd. R
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