Skip to main content
About Us
Our Impact
Staff
Board
Contact Us
Our work
Global
National
Wildlife
Wild Places
Indigenous Communities and Conservation
Project Websites
Alberta Community Bat Program
Arctic Noise
Key Biodiversity Areas (KBA) Canada
Learning from Lake Sturgeon
Ring of Fire
SHAPE of Nature
WCS Canada Bats
Yukon Climate Change Adaptation
News
Latest News
e-Newsletter
Muddy Boots Blog
External Blogs
Radio and Podcasts
Publications
Library Search
Journal Articles
Conservation Reports
Policy Comments
Story maps & Data
Annual Reports
Financial Reports
Opportunities
Fellowships
Careers
Support Us
Donor Impact
Ways to Give
Legacy Gifts
Other Ways to Help
Donate
Wild at Heart
search
Donate
Menu
Winging it with old-growth trees
Views: 311
(January 24, 2024)
Can fake old-growth trees help this endangered animal? Northern myotis bats weigh little more than a loonie and have long, dark ears. Females take turns looking after each other’s pups under the bark of old trees — just the sort disappearing in a rare B.C. rainforest Read the full story on The Narwhal.
READ THE STORY
More than minerals at stake in Ontario’s claim-staking boom
Views: 691
(December 19, 2023)
-
With a click of a mouse, mining interests have laid claim to more than 72,000 square kilometres of land in northern Ontario over the last five years.
READ THE STORY
A library full of sound: How a new collection of underwater sounds will help protect marine life
Views: 2241
(May 16, 2022)
-
Sound has already told us that this remote ocean is brimming with life, including healthy populations of bowhead and beluga whales, ringed and bearded seals, and fish like Arctic cod, for a start. WCS Canada’s Arctic research team has had an ear to this ocean for some time now and we have amassed a library of sound of our own. Read this blog written by our Arctic scientist William Halliday in Canadian Geographic.
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
External Blogs
Key Biodiversity Areas bring conservation close to home
Views: 2386
(February 28, 2022)
-
In this blog, Dan Kraus, our Director of National Conservation, explains how identifying Key Biodiversity Areas is crucial for biodiversity in Canada and across the world in the Canadian Geographic.
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
External Blogs
Modelling threats to caribou in Ontario’s Ring of Fire
Views: 2560
(October 26, 2021)
-
As interest in Ontario’s mineral-rich Ring of Fire region grows, caribou face threats on multiple fronts. New research could help chart a path to their conservation.
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
External Blogs
‘Bat boxes’ could help revive Canada’s depleting bat population
Views: 2807
(August 25, 2021)
-
Wildlife Conservation Society Canada and Canadian Wildlife Federation launch the Canadian Bat Box Project to help Canada's bat populations recover with the help of community scientists.
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
External Blogs
Environmental laws in Canada fall short of addressing the ongoing biodiversity crisis
Views: 2991
(July 05, 2021)
-
Does Canada have what it takes to protect biodiversity? Our research suggests there is a lot of work to be done to close the gap between commitments and actions.
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
External Blogs
Unlocking Ontario’s fishy secret
Views: 2982
(May 25, 2021)
-
The far north in Ontario is an aquatic haven. At least 50 species of fish can be found in the Arctic drainage basin in Ontario. Connie O'Connor and Meg Southee explain how they predicted which fish species are where, how they identified key areas for freshwater diversity and why we should protect these habitats.
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
External Blogs
Bats are superheroes of the night. Their superpowers could help us protect them.
Views: 3264
(December 28, 2020)
-
Bats' ability to echolocate is an incredible innovation. It's also one that can help us protect them.
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
External Blogs
Beluga whistles and clicks could be silenced by an increasingly noisy Arctic Ocean
Views: 2908
(December 17, 2020)
-
This article by WCS Canada scientist Dr. William Halliday explains how climate change is increasing the noise levels under Arctic waters, and why the increasing cacophony can spell trouble for belugas.
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
External Blogs
Page 1 of 6
First
Previous
[1]
2
3
4
5
6
Next
Last
Current Articles
|
Archives
|
Search